N. Chukwuone, Kira Lancker, Jörn O Schmidt, E. Amaechina
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Biomass decline is a vital threat for small-scale fisheries, but lack of data affects our ability to understand both biomass development and fishers’ adaptation. This study contributes to the literature on cost-effective, survey-data-based methods in data-poor and development-oriented settings. Based on original survey data from Nigeria, we find that 58% of respondents perceive a decline in fish abundance, in particular top-predator biomass. However, we also find signs of strategic behavior by respondents. Subsequently, we use multinomial logit and probit models to analyze the consequences of biomass decline for livelihoods. Our empirical findings support our theoretical prediction that biomass decline may crowd out some fishers while net favoring others, based on heterogeneous competitiveness. Furthermore, crowding-out status overlaps with high financial vulnerability. This emphasizes that biomass decline not only affects the cost of fishing, but may also adversely affect the fisheries pro-poor functions.
期刊介绍:
Marine Resource Economics (MRE) publishes creative and scholarly economic analyses of a range of issues related to natural resource use in the global marine environment. The scope of the journal includes conceptual and empirical investigations aimed at addressing real-world oceans and coastal policy problems. Examples include studies of fisheries, aquaculture, seafood marketing and trade, marine biodiversity, marine and coastal recreation, marine pollution, offshore oil and gas, seabed mining, renewable ocean energy sources, marine transportation, coastal land use and climate adaptation, and management of estuaries and watersheds.