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Impact of Gear Choice on Open Access Fisheries: A Study on Fishery Regimes

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  • Gómez-Cardona, Santiago
  • Kammerer, Johannes

Abstract

The regulation of gears constitutes a fisheries management strategy primarily aimed at preserving immature fish. This approach circumvents the politically sensitive and difficult-to-enforce direct restrictions on entry and catches that characterize many developing contexts. However, existing recommendations often oversimplify socioeconomic dimensions and assume complete government control over gear selection. This oversimplification overlooks crucial effects resulting from the fishers’ agency. To address this gap, our study highlights the implications of fishing gear selection in the outcomes of a fishery. We propose that the choice of fishing gear, i.e., the ability of fishers to select for different fish sizes, has significant direct implications for management due to the distinct fishery regimes it leads to. A swift transition between two states characterizes these regimes: one with high output value and a significant proportion of fishers targeting large fish, and the other with low output value and a predominant number of fishers aiming for small fish. These regimes emerge in response to contextual variables such as prices and economic activity and are not a product of government intervention. Policy management operates on top of these regimes, taking advantage of or hampered by them depending on the context. Our findings are derived from an agent-based model replicating the general conditions on the Nile Perch Fishery in Lake Victoria and accurately simulating its age-structured fish stock. This allows for dynamic shifts driven by gear choices that target different fish sizes.

Suggested Citation

  • Gómez-Cardona, Santiago & Kammerer, Johannes, 2023. "Impact of Gear Choice on Open Access Fisheries: A Study on Fishery Regimes," Working Papers 0732, University of Heidelberg, Department of Economics.
  • Handle: RePEc:awi:wpaper:0732
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Florian Diekert, 2012. "Growth Overfishing: The Race to Fish Extends to the Dimension of Size," Environmental & Resource Economics, Springer;European Association of Environmental and Resource Economists, vol. 52(4), pages 549-572, August.
    2. Gómez-Cardona, Santiago & Kammerer, Johannes & Mrosso, Hillary, 2022. "Fishing Fleet Selectivity in Lake Victoria's Nile Perch Fishery," Working Papers 0712, University of Heidelberg, Department of Economics.
    3. Carrella, Ernesto & Saul, Steven & Marshall, Kristin & Burgess, Matthew G. & Cabral, Reniel B. & Bailey, Richard M. & Dorsett, Chris & Drexler, Michael & Madsen, Jens Koed & Merkl, Andreas, 2020. "Simple Adaptive Rules Describe Fishing Behaviour Better than Perfect Rationality in the US West Coast Groundfish Fishery," Ecological Economics, Elsevier, vol. 169(C).
    4. Diekert, Florian & Eymess, Tillmann & Goeschl, Timo & Gómez-Cardona, Santiago & Luomba, Joseph, 2022. "Subsidizing Compliance: A Multi-Unit Price List Mechanism for Legal Fishing Nets at Lake Victoria," Working Papers 0711, University of Heidelberg, Department of Economics.
    5. Kammerer, Johannes & Gomez-Cardona, Santiago & Nyamweya, Chrisphine, 2022. "Size selective fishing: The effect of size selectivity on the equilibrium yield in the Nile perch fishery of Lake Victoria," Working Papers 0720, University of Heidelberg, Department of Economics.
    6. repec:awi:wpaper:720 is not listed on IDEAS
    7. Nøstbakken, Linda, 2008. "Fisheries law enforcement--A survey of the economic literature," Marine Policy, Elsevier, vol. 32(3), pages 293-300, May.
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