Gear-based characterization of the Gizo, Solomon Islands, inshore commercial finfish fishery

In 2015–2016, a gear-specific assessment of the Gizo, Solomon Islands, commercial inshore fishery was conducted to assist management decision making. The survey identified at least 260 species and 25 families among over 14,000 individual catch- and gear-specific fish photos taken using a digital image capture system. Seventy-nine fishers provided 175 catches during surveys and more than 1,600 fisher and vendor interviews were conducted. More than 75% of all individual fish sampled belonged to nine families that included groupers (Epinephelidae) with 29 species and snappers (Lutjanidae) with 28 species. Groupers, snappers and emperors (Lethrinidae) dominated line-caught fish, while speared catch was composed primarily of parrotfish (Scaridae) and surgeonfish and unicornfish (Acanthuridae). Catch-per-unit effort (CPUE) was 3.9  0.1 kg hr−1 fisher−1 overall, with the highest CPUE for line fishing at 4.5  1.6 kg hr−1 and lowest CPUE for nighttime spearfishing (2.1  0.4 kg hr−1). Gear- specific size distributions and species targeted varied widely, with juveniles dominating most catches for speared fish. Between line-caught and speared catch, only two species were common within the top 25 species. At the time of the study there were no enacted national regulations related to finfish in the inshore fishery in Solomon Islands. Community-based management approaches have been endorsed by government and non-government entities in Solomon Islands, however a greater level of community engagement and voluntary fisher compliance is needed in concert with government enforcement to control potential overfishing, particularly nighttime spearfishing. Ongoing support for precautionary, adaptive management is a recommended course of action to limit the potential for overfishing in Gizo and other coastal areas of high human population density that rely heavily on marine resources.

 

Kevin L. Rhodes, Paul Tua, Reuben Sulu, Priscilla Pitakaka, Patrick Kekete, Margaret Uti, Fred Funu, Rosalie Masu

Related Resources

Satellite tracking of tiger sharks in the Eastern Central Atlantic reveals varied space-use patterns and ocean-basin connectivity
Large-bodied sharks, including the tiger shark (Galeocerdo cuvier), play crucial roles as top predators in marine ecosystems, regulating...
READ MORE
Characterizing seasonal whale shark habitat in the western North Atlantic
There are significant knowledge gaps in the ecology of whale sharks Rhincodon typus beyond well-studied coastal aggregation sites....
READ MORE
Validation and otolith‐mass prediction of age and growth for cardinal snapper Pristipomoides macrophthalmus of the Caribbean Sea
Abstract Cardinal snapper Pristipomoides mac- rophthalmus is a commercially important, but com- monly misidentifed, deepwater species...
READ MORE
1 2 3 19