Artículo
Global dataset of species-specific inland recreational fisheries harvest for consumption
Embke, Holly S.; Nyboer, Elizabeth A.; Robertson, Ashley M.; Arlinghaus, Robert; Akintola, Shehu L.; Atessahin, Tuncay; Badr, Laamiri Mohamed; Baigún, Claudio Rafael M.
; Basher, Zeenatul; Beard, T. Douglas; Boros, Gergely; Bower, Shannon D.; Cooke, Steven J.; Cowx, Ian G.; Franco, Adolfo; Gaspar Dillanes, Ma. Teresa; Granada, Vladimir Puentes; Hart, Robert John; Heinsohn, Carlos R.; Jalabert, Vincent; Kapusta, Andrzej; Krajč, Tibor; Koehn, John D.; Lopes, Gonçalo; Lyach, Roman; Magqina, Terence; Milardi, Marco; Nattabi, Juliet; Nyaboke, Hilda; Phang, Sui; Potts, Warren M.; Ribeiro, Filipe; Mercado-Silva, Norman; Sreenivasan, Naren; Thorpe, Andy; Treer, Tomislav; Ustups, Didzis; Weyl, Olaf L. F.; Wood, Louisa E.; Zengin, Mustafa; Lynch, Abigail J.
Fecha de publicación:
12/2022
Editorial:
Nature
Revista:
Scientific Data
ISSN:
2052-4463
Idioma:
Inglés
Tipo de recurso:
Artículo publicado
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
Inland recreational fisheries, found in lakes, rivers, and other landlocked waters, are important to livelihoods, nutrition, leisure, and other societal ecosystem services worldwide. Although recreationally-caught fish are frequently harvested and consumed by fishers, their contribution to food and nutrition has not been adequately quantified due to lack of data, poor monitoring, and under-reporting, especially in developing countries. Beyond limited global harvest estimates, few have explored species-specific harvest patterns, although this variability has implications for fisheries management and food security. Given the continued growth of the recreational fishery sector, understanding inland recreational fish harvest and consumption rates represents a critical knowledge gap. Based on a comprehensive literature search and expert knowledge review, we quantified multiple aspects of global inland recreational fisheries for 81 countries spanning ~192 species. For each country, we assembled recreational fishing participation rate and estimated species-specific harvest and consumption rate. This dataset provides a foundation for future assessments, including understanding nutritional and economic contributions of inland recreational fisheries.
Archivos asociados
Licencia
Identificadores
Colecciones
Articulos (IIIA)
Articulos de INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACION E INGENIERIA AMBIENTAL
Articulos de INSTITUTO DE INVESTIGACION E INGENIERIA AMBIENTAL
Citación
Embke, Holly S.; Nyboer, Elizabeth A.; Robertson, Ashley M.; Arlinghaus, Robert; Akintola, Shehu L.; et al.; Global dataset of species-specific inland recreational fisheries harvest for consumption; Nature; Scientific Data; 9; 1; 12-2022; 1-10
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