Authors
Ray Hilborn, Ricardo Oscar Amoroso, Christopher M Anderson, Julia K Baum, Trevor A Branch, Christopher Costello, Carryn L De Moor, Abdelmalek Faraj, Daniel Hively, Olaf P Jensen, Hiroyuki Kurota, L Richard Little, Pamela Mace, Tim McClanahan, Michael C Melnychuk, Cóilín Minto, Giacomo Chato Osio, Ana M Parma, Maite Pons, Susana Segurado, Cody S Szuwalski, Jono R Wilson, Yimin Ye
Publication date
2020/1/28
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
117
Issue
4
Pages
2218-2224
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Marine fish stocks are an important part of the world food system and are particularly important for many of the poorest people of the world. Most existing analyses suggest overfishing is increasing, and there is widespread concern that fish stocks are decreasing throughout most of the world. We assembled trends in abundance and harvest rate of stocks that are scientifically assessed, constituting half of the reported global marine fish catch. For these stocks, on average, abundance is increasing and is at proposed target levels. Compared with regions that are intensively managed, regions with less-developed fisheries management have, on average, 3-fold greater harvest rates and half the abundance as assessed stocks. Available evidence suggests that the regions without assessments of abundance have little fisheries management, and stocks are in poor shape. Increased application of area-appropriate fisheries …
Total citations
20192020202120222023202426817015117780
Scholar articles
R Hilborn, RO Amoroso, CM Anderson, JK Baum… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2020