The Caribbean Fishery Management Council (CFMC) recognizes the need to move toward ecosystem-based fisheries management (EBFM) by taking into account interactions among marine species, human activities, and the environment. Drawing from guidance provided by the Lenfest Fishery Ecosystem Task Force, the CFMC is planning to develop a Fishery Ecosystem Plan (FEP) to evaluate how best to integrate ecosystem approaches into existing management for U.S. Caribbean waters. However, stakeholders and managers in the region suggest that a key precursor to an FEP is characterizing the Caribbean’s diverse marine ecosystems. This process may include defining relationships among marine species, evaluating the social and economic significance of ecosystem components, and identifying the stressors that threaten each system.
To meet this need, the Lenfest Ocean Program is funding Drs. J.J. Cruz-Motta, University of Puerto Rico-Mayaguez; Stacey Williams, Institute for Socio-Ecological Research; and Tarsila Seara, University of New Haven, to:
Managing a fishery as a dynamic system that includes interacting ecological, environmental, and socioeconomic components requires a different knowledge base and planning process than does traditional single-species management. In 1999, a NOAA Fisheries Ecosystem Principles Advisory Panel recommended the development of Fishery Ecosystem Plans, or FEPs, to support decision-making and thus operationalize EBFM.
In 2014, the Lenfest Ocean Program convened a 14-member task force to develop a practical blueprint for building FEPs. The Fishery Ecosystem Task Force found that a critical first step in fishery ecosystem planning is developing an overall conceptual model of how a fishery system works. Conceptual models enable managers to assess how the relationships among the ecological and socioeconomic components of an ecosystem can influence fisheries. This information can then serve as a baseline from which to generate an EBFM vision and strategy.
A conceptual model for the U.S. Caribbean will need to characterize highly diverse systems, from coastal coral reef assemblages to offshore blue-water habitats. Stakeholder input based on personal experience, along with quantitative data collected from the marine systems and the communities they support, will serve as key information for constructing such a model.
Dr. Cruz-Motta and his team will partner with managers, scientists, and stakeholders to build conceptual and quantitative models for each of the three management areas within the U.S. Caribbean: 1) Puerto Rico; 2) St. John/St. Thomas; and 3) St. Croix.
The researchers will hold multiple rounds of workshops with stakeholders, including fishermen, managers, and members of the conservation community, to gather information on their understanding of the structure and connectedness of the U.S. Caribbean’s three management regions. During the first round of workshops, the researchers will inform stakeholders of the project’s objectives. Then, the team will use a cognitive mapping approach, in which stakeholders create visual representations of what they perceive to be primary ecosystem components (e.g., fish species, habitat types), the relationships among them, and the factors (human-caused or otherwise) that could impact those components. This method will provide a tool to help readily analyze and communicate stakeholder perceptions.
For its quantitative approach, the research team will compile all available information related to the U.S. Caribbean’s marine ecosystems, including fishery-dependent and fishery-independent data, environmental variables, socioeconomic indicators, and human-induced stressors. They will then analyze the trends across space and time for each data source to address information gaps identified during the stakeholder workshops. These analyses will enable the researchers to determine whether the structure and composition of marine communities have varied over time, whether those changes have been similar across regions, and what variables may have caused such shifts. The team will also examine the significance of the specific relationships among the components of an ecosystem.
Finally, the researchers will compare stakeholder perspectives as represented by the conceptual maps with the quantitative analyses. To do this, they will integrate the two approaches to refine overall conceptual models, validate elements that stakeholders disagree on or are unsure of, and prioritize future research efforts. The research team will also work with stakeholders to select and estimate key indicators of ecosystem health and identify the main threats to fisheries systems.
The three-year project is scheduled to conclude in June 2022.
For any questions, please contact Emily Knight, Manager, Lenfest Ocean Program, at eknight@lenfestocean.org. To learn more about this research and stay up to date on our latest projects, follow us on Twitter @lenfestocean or sign up for our newsletter at https://lenfestocean.org/en/about-us/contact-us/lenfest-newsletter-sign-up