Measuring the contribution of ecological composition and functional services of ecosystems to the dynamics of KwaZulu-Natal coast fisheries
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Date
Authors
Hassan, Rashid M.
Crafford, J.G. (Jacobus Gert)
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
This study extended a bio-economic fishery model to establish an explicit link between coastal and estuarine
ecosystems ecological composition (biodiversity) and functional (nutrient supply) attributes and the dynamics
and productivity of KZN coastal fisheries. Results confirmed the importance and strong contribution of the tested
ecological attributes. In-sample simulation indicates that current fishing efforts and harvest rates are sustainable,
but are sensitive to changes in nutrient influx and rainfall. This confirms the need to modify conventional
fisheriesmodels to include environmental variables as additional predictors of fish stocks in addition to historical
catch records and catch effort for management and control of fishing efforts and permits. This study provided
confirmation of the strong linkage between nutrient levels and productivity of coastal fisheries thus enabling
investigation of runoff and rainfall related climate change effects on the KZN fisheries.
Description
Keywords
Coastal fisheries, Regulating services valuation, Bio-economic modeling
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Hassan, RM & Crafford, JG 2015, 'Measuring the contribution of ecological composition and functional services of ecosystems to the dynamics of KwaZulu-Natal coast fisheries', Ecological Economics, vol. 119, pp. 306-313.