4.6 Article

Enhancing the ecosystem approach for the fishery for Antarctic krill within the complex, variable, and changing ecosystem at South Georgia

Journal

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 78, Issue 6, Pages 2065-2081

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/icesjms/fsab092

Keywords

Antarctic krill; CCAMLR; ecosystem approach to fisheries management; ecosystem change; ecosystem monitoring; ecosystem variability; environment drivers; South Georgia

Funding

  1. UKRI/BAS Ecosystems
  2. Darwin Plus grant [DPLUS072]
  3. Pew Charitable Trust [00034295]

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The ecosystem approach to fisheries management aims to sustain healthy marine ecosystems and their associated fisheries. Implementation in the Antarctic has provided valuable insights, but additional monitoring is needed. Variability in the krill fishery at South Georgia is linked to sea surface temperature, with ecological structure influencing results.
The objective of the ecosystem approach to fisheries management is to sustain healthy marine ecosystems and the fisheries they support. One of the earliest implementations was in the Southern Ocean, where decision rules and stock reference points were developed for managing the Antarctic krill fishery, together with an ecosystem-monitoring programme intended to aid management decisions. This latter component has not been incorporated directly into management, so here, we consider variability in the krill fishery at South Georgia, relating it to physical and biological monitoring indices, finding sea surface temperature to be a key correlate with both annual catch and long-term biological indices. Some indices from krill predators showed significant positive relationships with krill harvesting in the preceding winter, presumably indicative of the importance of winter foraging conditions. We explore how ecological structure affects results, examining two monitoring sites 100km apart. Results suggest different biological conditions at the two sites, probably reflecting different scales of ecosystem operation, emphasizing that an appreciation of scale will enhance krill fishery management. Finally, in reviewing different drivers of ecological change, we identify important additional monitoring that would help better reflect ecosystem status, improve the utility of CEMP, providing information necessary for the ecosystem approach at South Georgia.

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