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Participatory artisanal fisheries management in islands: application to the Canary Islands (Spain)

Author: Serafin Corral, David Romero Manrique de Lara
2017 pdf 1.16Mb

Socio-economic development of small-island fishing communities is greatly dependent on local coastal and marine resources. However, illegal fishing and aggressive practices in insular ecosystems lead to overexploitation and environmental deterioration. Moreover, a lack of scientific data increases uncertainty and prevents the adequate monitoring of marine resources.

This paper focuses on the integration of local fishing communities into decision-making processes with the aim of promoting artisanal fishing on the Island of Tenerife (the Canary Islands), as a way to preserve the marine ecosystem and socio-economic development of traditional cofradias (fishers' organisations). A qualitative methodological framework, based on participatory problemsolution trees and focus groups, was used to identify the main factors impeding the sustainable development of the artisanal fishing sector on the island and to elaborate collective proposals with policy implications.

The fishing community involved identified four main issues that are maintaining an unsustainable island fishery:

  • Over-exploitation;
  • Poor self-management of cofradias and commercialisation problems;
  • Fisher individualism and low co-management strategies;
  • Illegal fishing increase vs. artisanal fishing decline.

Results show the required policy enhancements to tackle them and the need to adapt regulations to the local situation.