4.6 Article

The race for jellyfish: Winners and losers in Mexico's Gulf of California

期刊

MARINE POLICY
卷 134, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpol.2021.104775

关键词

Fisheries management; Stomolophus; Cannonball jellyfish; Adaptive co-management; Artisanal fishery; Small scale fishery

资金

  1. Oak Foundation
  2. Marisla Foundation
  3. MAVA Foundation
  4. Paul M. Angell Family Foundation
  5. David and Lucile Packard Foundation
  6. Oceana
  7. Bloomberg Philanthropies
  8. Minderoo Foundation
  9. CONACYT
  10. Nippon Foundation Ocean Nexus Center

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The fishery of cannonball jellyfish in the central portion of Mexico's Gulf of California has followed a familiar pattern of exploration, rapid development, and subsequent collapse. Lack of conservation efforts due to overseas markets has led to global-scale exploitation. Despite research interest, recommendations based on sound science were not followed, leading to mismanagement of a potentially lucrative fishery. Challenges in managing a nascent fishery with high uncertainty, especially in a developing country, highlight the need for a precautionary approach. There is still hope for implementing management strategies that promote collaboration, research, and sustainability to benefit locals now and in the future.
The trajectory of the cannonball jellyfish (Stomolophus sp. 2) fishery in the central portion of Mexico's Gulf of California is an all too familiar one, consisting of exploration, rapid development, and, as of now, subsequent collapse. As all of the product is exported to markets overseas, buyers have little incentive to conserve local stocks, with jellyfish now exhibiting a global-scale sequential exploitation experienced by many other marine resources. While historical data gaps are often used as excuses for overexploitation after the fact, the emergence of this modern fishery was accompanied by relatively broad research interest; however, recommendations based on sound science were not followed. The resultant paucity of policy goals, regulation, cooperation, compliance, and enforcement has resulted in the mismanagement of a potentially lucrative fishery for future generations. There are always myriad challenges when attempting to manage a nascent fishery with high uncertainty, particularly in a developing country, and this case further highlights the importance of taking a precautionary approach to emerging resource extraction. Multiple prior experiences with similar outcomes should behoove regulators and managers to exhibit extra caution, and yet, sustainability and forethought still appear to be secondary to short-term profits and employment support. Nonetheless, it is perhaps not too late for cannonball jellyfish fisheries in the Gulf of California, and there are opportunities to implement management strategies that promote collaboration, research, and sustainability. This fishery requires a new management regime that embraces adaptive co-management in order to provide benefits to locals, both now and in the future.

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