Preface
The future of traditional fisheries will be shaped by the
attention given to their special problems and by the recognition of their unique
value. Declining stocks of readily accessible fish, competition from industrial
fishermen, high operating costs, less than optimal gear and vessels, poor
storage and marketing facilities, and little access to credit all tend to limit
development for fishermen in the traditional sector. Culturally and economically
acceptable technologies can help with some of these problems, but policy changes
and interventions must also be part of the assistance strategy.
The effort is worthwhile. Traditional fishermen are important
contributors to the food supply in developing countries. They currently account
for about one-quarter of the world's total fish catch-an estimated 20 million
tons of a total of 80 million. Although only about one-fifth of the fish caught
in Latin America come from the traditional sector, in Asia these fishermen
provide
two-thirds of the catch, and in Africa, five-sixths.
Traditional fishermen are economically important for other
reasons as well: their boats and gear are locally produced, easily repaired with
local parts, and represent a low capital investment; their fish-capture
techniques and propulsion methods are both low energy consumers. Commercial
fishing boats and gear, in contrast, are largely imported, and therefore often
require imported spare parts. Moreover, they require a high capital investment
and consume large amounts of energy to reach and capture fish. There is also
more wastage of by-catch from their operations.
Many developing countries have ignored traditional fishermen and
have concentrated their assistance in industrial fisheries. Traditional
fishermen have suffered more than neglect from this policy: commercial trawlers
operating near shore can simultaneously harvest large numbers of fish (including
juveniles) and destroy spawning and breeding grounds. The adverse effects for
the traditional fishermen are both immediate and persistent; current stocks are
depleted and the potential for recovery is reduced.
Developing countries could increase their fish harvest and
improve the quality of life for their coastal dwellers by providing traditional
fishing communities with access to modest technical and financial resources and
by assuring protection for their fishing grounds. The evaluation and
introduction of some of the technologies described in this report could initiate
this process.
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Information in this report was largely derived
through a meeting (participants listed on pages iii-iv) at the University of
Miami's Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences in Miami, Florida,
August 13-15, 1985. Additional data was obtained through correspondence with
fisheries experts throughout the
world.