Overfishing of Inland Waters
University of Wyoming · World Wildlife Fund · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Inland waters have received only slight consideration in recent discussions of the global fisheries crisis, even though inland fisheries provide much-needed protein, jobs, and income, especially in poor rural communities of developing countries. Systematic overfishing of fresh waters is largely unrecognized because of weak reporting and because fishery declines take place within a complex of other pressures. Moreover, the ecosystem consequences of changes to the species, size, and trophic composition of fish assemblages are poorly understood. These complexities underlie the paradox that overexploitation of a fishery may not be marked by declines in total yield, even when individual species and long-term…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 12.24
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 43
Authors
7- JDJ. David AllanCorresponding
University of Wyoming, World Wildlife Fund, Dartmouth College, American Institute of Biological Sciences
- RARobin Abell
Dartmouth College, University of Wyoming, American Institute of Biological Sciences, World Wildlife Fund
- ZHZeb Hogan
World Wildlife Fund, University of Wyoming, American Institute of Biological Sciences, Dartmouth College
- CRCarmen Revenga
Dartmouth College, University of Wyoming, World Wildlife Fund, American Institute of Biological Sciences
- BWBrad W. Taylor
American Institute of Biological Sciences, World Wildlife Fund, University of Wyoming, Dartmouth College
Topics & keywords
- Overfishing
- Overexploitation
- Threatened species
- Fishery
- Fishing
- Maximum sustainable yield
- Defaunation
- Fish stock