Management capacity varied greatly among the

13 fishery a

Management capacity varied greatly among the

13 fishery agencies, especially in the number of export inspection officers, number of scientists with skills in stock assessment and patrol boats for inspections at sea (Fig. 2). Micronesian countries have weaker capacity for managing sea cucumber fisheries than most agencies in Melanesia and Polynesia. Concerning the Micronesian countries, none had skilled officers SB203580 ic50 to conduct stock assessment analyses, they had fewer officers who could identify sea cucumber species than in Melanesian and Polynesian countries, none had funding for underwater visual censuses, and none had patrol boats for inspectiing sea cucumbers at sea. Technical capacity in fishery agencies was relatively strong for some management tasks and weak for others. The number of agency scientists with technical skills in stock assessment (e.g. to calculate maximum sustainable yield) varied widely among the 13 fisheries. Half of the countries had no such

scientists. Management agencies generally had many officers (average=6) responsible for planning and implementing marine reserves. All but two agencies had at least three officers who can identify live sea cucumbers to species level. On the other hand, just 5 of the 13 agencies had more than two officers Buparlisib trained in export inspections and one quarter of countries have no trained inspection officers. More than three quarters (79%) of fishery agencies have human resources and skills for underwater visual census (UVC) but, paradoxically, less than one quarter (21%) has funding for conducting regular UVCs. All but three fishery managers reported difficulty in obtaining monthly information on catch from fishers. Enforcement and inspection Sclareol capacity was generally very weak. On average, agencies have less than two boats for inspections at sea and half of them have none. Half of the managers believed that landings of (fresh) sea cucumbers are

checked “practically never” in their fishery. Sea cucumber landings were checked one or more times per week in only four fisheries. In most cases, bags of beche-de-mer (dried sea cucumbers) are checked occasionally prior to export, and in four of the export fisheries they are checked “regularly”. In just half of the export fisheries, inspection officers have received training in identifying dried sea cucumbers. More than two out of three (71%) government agencies had not established formal management objectives for their sea cucumber fisheries and most (79%) did not have reference points for assessing management performance. During the workshop, the 10 multi-disciplinary management objectives were ranked quite differently among the fishery managers (Fig. 3). The objective ranked most important, on average, was to maintain stocks at levels to sustain viable populations and recruitment.

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