ARTÍCULO

Autor(es)

Hem Nalini Morzaria-Luna, Peggy Turk-Boyer, José Manuel Dorantes Hernández, Elia Polanco-Mizquez, Caroline Downton-Hoffmann, Gabriela Cruz-Piñón, Tonatiuh Carrillo-Lammens, Rene Loaiza-Villanueva, Paloma Valdivia-Jiménez, Angeles Sánchez-Cruz, Valeria Peña-Mendoza, Ariadna Montserrat López-Ortiz, Volker Koch, Leonardo Vázquez-Vera, José Alfredo Arreola-Lizárraga, Imelda G. Amador-Castro, Alvin N. Suárez Castillo, Adrian Munguia-Vega,

Registrado por
Año

2020

Tipo de artículo

Revistas indexadas

Título de artículo

Fisheries management tools to support coastal and marine spatial planning: A case study from the Northern Gulf of California, Mexico

Volúmen

7

Número de registro

2215-0161

Campo

CIENCIAS DE LA TIERRA Y EL COSMOS

Disciplina

OTRAS ESPECIALIDADES EN MATERIA DE CIENCIAS DE LA TIERRA DEL COSMOS Y DEL MEDIO AMBIENTE

Subdisciplina

Resumen

A management approach was developed that combined spatial and non-spatial tools to inform a Coastal and Marine Spatial Planning Process (CMSP) in the Puerto Peñasco-Puerto Lobos Coastal Corridor, Northern Gulf of California, Sonora, Mexico. Four fisheries management tools were applied with an emphasis on ecosystem level management for eleven small-scale fisheries. Two spatial management tools, using a spatial prioritization approach, were combined with a permit regularization process, a non-spatial quota prioritization, and a tradeoff analysis in a novel way: ? Locally Managed Marine Areas were developed, these are spatial areas where individual community fishermen are assigned the rights to harvest and manage specific fisheries within defined geographic areas. ? Fishery refuges that incorporate information on fisheries, ecological importance, and connectivity. ? A non-spatial quota prioritization process using a framework for the integrated assessment of stocks, encompassing a vulnerability analysis, a sustainability analysis, and a management framework analysis. ? A trade-off analysis of the combination of these different management tools, using an Atlantis ecosystem model for the northern Gulf of California, that tested the ecosystem effects of alternative scenarios to assess benefits in support of ecosystem-based management.

URL (DOI, ORCID, HANDLE, enlace)
Fuente

Sistema Estatal de Información y Documentación Científica y Tecnológica

Número de Visitas

13

SÍGUENOS EN NUESTRAS REDES SOCIALES