Authors
Michael C Melnychuk, Hiroyuki Kurota, Pamela M Mace, Maite Pons, Cóilín Minto, Giacomo Chato Osio, Olaf P Jensen, Carryn L de Moor, Ana M Parma, L Richard Little, Daniel Hively, Charmane E Ashbrook, Nicole Baker, Ricardo O Amoroso, Trevor A Branch, Christopher M Anderson, Cody S Szuwalski, Julia K Baum, Tim R McClanahan, Yimin Ye, Alessandro Ligas, Jilali Bensbai, Grant G Thompson, John DeVore, Arni Magnusson, Bjarte Bogstad, Edward Wort, Jake Rice, Ray Hilborn
Publication date
2021/5
Journal
Nature Sustainability
Volume
4
Issue
5
Pages
440-449
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Which management actions work best to prevent or halt overfishing and to rebuild depleted populations? A comprehensive evaluation of multiple, co-occurring management actions on the sustainability status of marine populations has been lacking. Here we compiled detailed management histories for 288 assessed fisheries from around the world (accounting for 45% of those with formal stock assessments) and used hierarchical time-series analyses to estimate effects of different management interventions on trends in stock status. Rebuilding plans, applied less commonly than other management measures (implemented at some point historically for 43% of stocks), rapidly lowered fishing pressure towards target levels and emerged as the most important factor enabling overfished populations to recover. Additionally, the ratification of international fishing agreements, and harvest control rules specifying how catch …
Total citations
202120222023202416223715
Scholar articles
MC Melnychuk, H Kurota, PM Mace, M Pons, C Minto… - Nature Sustainability, 2021