Skip to main content
Log in

Management strategies for sustainable invertebrate fisheries in coastal ecosystems of Galicia (NW Spain)

  • Published:
Aquatic Ecology Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

Artisanal coastal invertebrate fisheries in Galicia are socio-economically important and ecologically relevant. Their management, however, has been based on models of fish population dynamics appropriate for highly mobile demersal or pelagic resources and for industrial fisheries. These management systems focus on regulating fishing effort, but in coastal ecosystems activities that change or destruct key habitats may have a greater effect on population abundance than does fishing mortality. The Golfo Artabro was analysed as a representative example of a coastal ecosystem in Galicia, and the spider crab Maja squinado used as a model of an exploited coastal invertebrate, for which shallow coastal areas are key habitats for juvenile stages. The commercial legal gillnet fishery for the spider crab harvests adults during their reproductive migrations to deep waters and in their wintering habitats. Illegal fisheries operate in shallow waters. The annual rate of exploitation is >90%, and <10% of the primiparous females reproduce effectively at least once. A simple spatially-explicit cohort model was constructed to simulate the population dynamics of spider crab females. Yield- and egg-per-recruit analyses corresponding to different exploitation regimes were performed to compare management policies directed to control the fishing effort or to protect key habitats. It was found that the protection of juvenile habitats could allow increases in yield and reproductive effort higher than in the present system, with such protection based in the control of the fishing effort of the legal fishery. Additionally, there is an urgent need for alternative research and management strategies in artisanal coastal fisheries based on the implementation of a system of territorial use rights for fishers, the integration of the fishers into assessment and management processes, and the protection of key habitats (marine reserves) as a basic tool for the regulation of the fisheries.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Beverton RJH and Holt SJ (1957) On the dynamics of exploited fish populations. Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, London. Fisheries Investigations 2 (19).

  • Botsford LW, Moloney CL, Hastings A, Largier JL, Powell TM, Higgins K and Quinn JF (1994). The influence of spatially and temporally oceanographic conditions on meroplanktonic metapopulations. Deep-Sea Res II 41: 107–145

    Google Scholar 

  • Caddy JF (1999) Fisheries management in the twenty-first century: will new paradigms apply? Rev Fish Biol Fish 9: 1–43

    Google Scholar 

  • FAO (1995) The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture. Rome, Italy

  • Freire J Fernández L and González-Gurriarán E (in press) Interactions of the fishery of the spider crab Maja squinado with mating, reproductive biology and migrations. ICES J Mar Sci

  • Freire J and García-Allut A (2000) Socioeconomic and biological causes of management failures in European artisanal fisheries: the case of Galicia (NW Spain). Mar Policy 24: 375–384

    Google Scholar 

  • Freire J, González-Gurriarán E and Bernárdez C (1999) Migratory patterns in the spider crab Maja squinado using telemetry and electronic tags. International Council for the Exploration of the Sea, C.M. 1999/AA:14, 11 pp

  • González-Gurriarán E, Fernández L, Freire J and Muiño R (1998) Mating and role of seminal receptacles in the reproductive biology of the spider crab Maja squinado (Decapoda, Majidae). J Exp Mar Biol Ecol 220: 269–285

    Google Scholar 

  • González-Gurriarán E, Fernández L, Freire J, Muiño R and Parapar J (1993) Reproduction of the spider crab Maja squinado (Brachyura: Majidae) in the southern Galician coast (NW Spain). International Council for the Exploration of the Sea, C.M. 1993/K:19, 15 pp

  • González-Gurriarán E and Freire J (1994) Movement patterns and habitat utilization in the spider crab Maja squinado (Herbst) (Decapoda, Majidae) measured by ultrasonic telemetry. J Exp Mar Biol Ecol 184: 269–291

    Google Scholar 

  • González-Gurriarán E, Freire J, Parapar J, Sampedro MP and Urcera M (1995) Growth at moult and moulting seasonality of the spider crab, Maja squinado (Herbst) (Decapoda: Majidae) in experimental conditions: implications for juvenile life history. J Exp Mar Biol Ecol 189: 183–203

    Google Scholar 

  • Hilborn R and Walters CJ (1992). Quantitative Fisheries Stock Assessment. Chapman & Hall, New York

    Google Scholar 

  • Hilborn R, Walters CJ and Ludwing D (1995) Sustainable exploitation of renewable resources. Ann Rev Ecol Syst 26: 45–67

    Google Scholar 

  • Hines AH, Wolcott TG, González-Gurriarán E, González-Escalante JL and Freire J (1995) Movement patterns and migrations in crabs: Telemetry of juvenile and adult behaviour in Callinectes sapidus and Maja squinado. J Mar Biol Ass UK 75: 27–42

    Google Scholar 

  • Jamieson GS and Campbell A (eds.) (1998) Proceedings of the North Pacific Symposium on Invertebrate Stok Assessment and Management. Can Spec Publ Fish Aquat Sci 125.

  • Ludwig D, Hilborn R and Walters CJ (1993) Uncertainty, resource exploitation, and conservation: lessons from history. Science, 260: 17, 36

    Google Scholar 

  • McGoodwin JR (1990) Crisis in the World's Fisheries-People, Problems and Policies. Stanford University Press, Stanford

    Google Scholar 

  • Montero P, Prego R, Gómez-Gesteira M, Neves R, Taboada JJ and Pérez-Villar V (1997) Aplicación de un modelo 2D al transporte de partículas en la Bahía de A Coruña. In: Prego R and Fernández JM (eds.), Procesos Biogeoquímicos en Sistemas Costeros Hispano-Lusos. Excma. Diputación Provincial de Pontevedra, Pontevedra, Spain

    Google Scholar 

  • Nowlis JS and Roberts CM (1999) Fisheries benefits and optimal design of marine reserves. Fish Bull 97: 604–616

    Google Scholar 

  • Orensanz JM and Jamieson GS (1998) The assessment and management of spatially structured stocks: an overview of the North Pacific Symposium on Invertebrate Stock Assessment and Management. In: Jamieson GS and Campbell A (eds.), Proceedings of the North Pacific Symposium on Invertebrate Stock Assessment and Management. Can Spec Publ Fish Aquat Sci 125: 441–459

  • Perry RI, Walters CJ and Boutillier JA (1999). A framework for providing scientific advice for the management of new and developing invertebrate fisheries. Rev Fish Biol Fish 9: 125–150

    Google Scholar 

  • Roberts CM (1997) Connectivity and management of Caribbean coral reefs. Science 278: 1454–1457

    PubMed  Google Scholar 

  • Rothschild BJ, Ault JS, Goulletquer P and Heral M (1994) Decline of the Chesapeake Bay oyster population: a century of habitat destruction and overfishing. Mar Ecol Prog Ser 111: 23–39

    Google Scholar 

  • Sampedro MP, González-Gurriarán E, Freire J and Muiño R (1999) Morphometry and sexual maturity of the spider crab Maja squinado (Decapoda: Majidae) in Galicia, Spain. J Crust Biol 19: 578–592.

    Google Scholar 

  • Xunta de Galicia (1992). Plan de Ordenación dos Recursos Pesqueiros e Marisqueiros de Galicia. Consellería de Pesca, Marisqueo e Acuicultura, Xunta de Galicia, España

    Google Scholar 

  • Xunta de Galicia (1995) Censo da frota pesqueira de Galicia (1994). Consellería de Pesca, Marisqueo e Acuicultura, Xunta de Galicia, España

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Freire, J., Bernárdez, C., Corgos, A. et al. Management strategies for sustainable invertebrate fisheries in coastal ecosystems of Galicia (NW Spain). Aquatic Ecology 36, 41–50 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1013350723445

Download citation

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1013350723445

Navigation