Fishing down the value chain: Biodiversity and access regimes in freshwater fisheries — the case of Malawi
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Elsevier B.V.
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This paper considers the connection between the diversity of catch in a multi-species fishery and the productivity of the fishery under different access regimes. A modified Gordon–Schaefer model is used to analyse the importance of the level of diversity in a fishery in open access and profit maximising regimes. The modified model, which includes both environmental and bioeconomic variables, is fitted to data from a gillnet fishery in Lake Malawi. Pressure on stocks is shown to be greater at all levels of biodiversity in open access than it is in profit maximising regimes. However, in a profit maximising regime both catch and the productivity of fishing effort is highest when there is a single marketed species. By contrast, in an open access regime catches are maximised at higher levels of bioeconomic diversity than in profit maximising regimes. Implications for policy are discussed.
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Kasulo, V., & Perrings, C. (2006). Fishing down the value chain: Biodiversity and access regimes in freshwater fisheries - the case of Malawi. Ecological Economics, 59(1), 106–114. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecolecon.2005.09.029
