Restoring Mexico's Gulf of California
EDF opens new office on the Baja Peninsula to bring catch shares to troubled fisheries
Nourished by nutrient-rich currents, the unique Gulf of California is home to a stunning array of marine mammals and fish. The gulf supplies more than half of Mexico's seafood and three-fourths of its shrimp.
But the gulf's fisheries are not what they once were. Like many of the world's most productive fishing grounds, the gulf has too many boats chasing too few fish. Though fishing harder, fishermen are catching less and revenues are diminishing.
That is why Environmental Defense Fund is working to transform Gulf of California fisheries. In collaboration with Mexican officials, fishing leaders and other stakeholders, we seek to implement an innovative approach for managing fisheries, called catch shares, for selected fisheries. EDF will focus on the blue shrimp fishery in the state of Sinaloa in the first year.
Cradle for sea life and an economic engine
Wedged between Baja California and mainland Mexico, this 932-mile-long body of water supports one of the most diverse marine ecosystems on Earth. Its shallow estuaries and coastal lagoons, deep ocean trenches and mangrove forests harbor a bounty of sea life, including six whale species and five of the world's eight sea turtle species. The critically endangered Vaquita porpoise, the world smallest cetacean, is found nowhere else.
The gulf is also Mexico's most important fishing grounds. With 900 known species of fish, gulf fisheries are a crucial source of food and jobs for local communities and are woven into coastal cultural traditions. The gulf provides more than half the country's seafood, from sardines and herring to shrimp and snapper.
Fishermen fish harder but still reel in smaller catches
But Gulf of California fisheries are not what they once were. Starting in the 1970s, fishing effort dramatically increased, as the number of large industrial fishing boats surged, along with the number of traditional small skiffs (known as pangas) used by artisanal fishermen.
Video: EDF Mexico scoping trip to learn about the Curvina fishery in the Upper Gulf of California:
EDF Mexico Visits Curvina Fishery from Environmental Defense Fund on Vimeo.
Fishing without a permit or with an illegally obtained permit is problematic, and resources are limited for monitoring and enforcement. Hundreds of sea turtles and vaquitas end up entangled in gillnets or scooped up by trawl nets.
Today, most of the large finfish, such as the near-extinct totoaba and swordfish, sought for their delicious meat, have been seriously overfished. Fishermen now seek out sea cucumbers, crabs and clams — or even jellyfish — to supply an ever-increasing global demand. This threatens the gulf's intricate web of life.
Though fishing harder, many can barely get enough to feed their families. One crab fisherman said that even though he travels twice as far, he needs 150 traps where once he needed 30 to catch the same number of crabs. Fishermen have few other options to earn a living, as the arid land around the gulf is ill suited for farming.
Catch shares 101: Sinaloa, Mexico from Environmental Defense Fund on Vimeo.
Innovative system offers hope for fishermen
The door opened in 2009 to transform Gulf of California fisheries. Both the Mexican government and fishermen want to resolve conflicts and end wasteful, destructive fishing practices. Catch shares, which have renewed ailing fisheries in other parts of the world, offers hope for restoring Mexico's fisheries.
"I hope that one day what is a dream for us, what we see here, will become our reality." —Comment from a Mexican fishing leader on Canada's successful catch share programs
Catch shares give fishermen a financial stake in the fishery and an incentive to become better stewards of this vital resource. Key decision makers from Mexico's national fishing commission to leaders of local fishing cooperatives have indicated their willingness try new solutions to make fisheries healthy and profitable again.
Building ground-breaking partnerships with key stakeholders
Building on our decade-long work promoting and designing catch share programs, Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) has forged a ground-breaking partnership with:
- World Wildlife Fund (WWF),
- Noroeste Sustentable (NOS, a Mexican nongovernmental organization),
- Mexico's National Commission for Fishing and Aquaculture (Conapesca — the fisheries management agency) and
- Mexico's National Fisheries Research Institute (Inapesca).
Laying the foundation for transformation
Over the past year, EDF and our partners laid the groundwork for developing catch share programs:
- Our team began working with fishermen's groups, local conservation groups and industry leaders, whose participation is critical to long-term success.
- EDF brought government officials, fishing leaders and fishermen to British Columbia to meet with Canadian fishermen and regulators and learn about successful catch share programs there.
- Our experts carried out on-the-ground research, determining the need for expanded monitoring and enforcement, and for more comprehensive data in some fisheries. Also, we learned of the extensive scientific and research capacity that exists in the area.
- Our analysis of available fishery data from the gulf showed that a well-designed catch share program can significantly boost fisheries economically, providing hope for a recovery in gulf fisheries.
EDF and its partners have started by focusing their efforts on the shrimp fishery — Mexico's most important fishery — in Sinaloa state, one of the prime shrimping grounds in the Gulf of California.
Posted: 24-Aug-2009; Updated: 17-Aug-2009
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