4.2 Article

Challenges in fisheries management in the Zambezi, one of the great rivers of Africa

Journal

FISHERIES MANAGEMENT AND ECOLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages 99-111

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/fme.12107

Keywords

African fisheries; comanagement; cpue; fisheries exploitation; floodplains; lakes

Categories

Funding

  1. Norwegian Agency for International Development (NORAD)
  2. World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF)
  3. European Union (EU)
  4. Namibia Nature Foundation (NNF)
  5. Southern African Science Service Centre for Climate Change and Adaptive Land Management (SASSCAL)
  6. Nedbank GoGreen fund
  7. University of Namibia
  8. South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity (SAIAB)
  9. National Research Foundation NRF [UID 74015]
  10. Rhodes University
  11. SAIAB
  12. National Research Foundation of South Africa
  13. ACP FISH II [CU/PE1/MZ/10/002]

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Almost all fisheries in the Zambezi River system have experienced severe declines in catch rates, loss of larger, most valuable fish species, and increased use of environmentally damaging active fishing gears. The fisheries of the Barotse, Caprivi and Kafue floodplains, and lakes Kariba (Zambian sector), Malawi and Malombe are all fished down. The concept of balanced harvesting with moderate effort has no relevance to these African inland fisheries, where rapid human population growth and lack of alternative livelihoods for small-scale fishers means they have no choice but to continue fishing despite dwindling returns. In some areas, e.g. Liuwa Plain National Park in Zambia and conservancies in Namibia, comanagement with local communities has potential for success, but other fisheries, e.g. Lake Malombe in Malawi, are so severely fished down that there is no prospect of recovery without radical restructuring of exploitation patterns coupled with habitat restoration.

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