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dc.contributorYVONNE SADOVY DE MITCHESON
dc.contributorCHRISTI LINARDICH
dc.contributorJOAO PEDRO BARREIROS
dc.contributorGINA M. RALPH
dc.contributorPEDRO AFONSO
dc.contributorBRAD E. ERISMAN
dc.contributorDAVID A. POLLARD
dc.contributorSEAN T. FENNESSY
dc.contributorATHILA A. BERTONCINI
dc.contributorREKHA J. NAIR
dc.contributorKEVIN L. RHODES
dc.contributorPATRICE FRANCOUR
dc.contributorTHIERRY BRULE
dc.contributorMELITA A. SAMOILYS
dc.contributorBEATRICE P. FERREIRA
dc.contributorMATTHEW THOMAS CRAIG
dc.coverage.spatialGeneración de conocimiento
dc.creatorJACINTO ALFONSO AGUILAR PERERA
dc.date2020-06-01
dc.date.accessioned2021-06-22T17:38:08Z
dc.date.available2021-06-22T17:38:08Z
dc.identifierhttp://www.sciencedirect.com.conricyt.remotexs.co/science/article/pii/S0308597X19306116
dc.identifier.urihttp://redi.uady.mx:8080/handle/123456789/4861
dc.description.abstractAmong threats to marine species, overfishing has often been highlighted as a major contributor to population declines and yet fishing effort has increased globally over the past decade. This paper discusses the decadal reassessment of groupers (family Epinephelidae), an important and valuable group of marine fishes subjected to high market demand and intense fishing effort, based on IUCN criteria. Allowing for uncertainty in the status of species listed as Data Deficient, 19 species (11.4%) are currently assigned to a “threatened” category. This first reassessment for a large marine fish taxon permits an evaluation of changes following the original assessments, provides a profile of the current conservation condition of species, identifies the challenges of assessing conservation status, and highlights current and emerging threats. Measures needed to reduce threats and lessons learned from conservation efforts are highlighted. Present threats include intensifying fishing effort in the face of absent or insufficient fishery management or monitoring, growing pressures from international trade, and an inadequate coverage in effectively managed, sized, or located protected areas. Emerging threats involve expansion of fishing effort into deeper waters and more remote locations, shifts to previously non-targeted species, increases in the capture, marketing and use of juveniles, growing demands for domestic and international trade, and, potentially, climate change. Those species most threatened are larger-bodied, longer-lived groupers, most of which reproduce in spawning aggregations.
dc.languageeng
dc.publisherMarine Policy
dc.relationcitation:0
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.rights​http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0
dc.sourceurn:issn:0308-597x
dc.subjectinfo:eu-repo/classification/cti/2
dc.subjectBIOLOGÍA Y QUÍMICA
dc.subjectinfo:eu-repo/classification/cti/3
dc.subjectMEDICINA Y CIENCIAS DE LA SALUD
dc.subjectEpinephelidae
dc.subjectExtinction risk
dc.subjectIUCN
dc.subjectOverfishing
dc.subjectSustainability
dc.titleValuable but vulnerable: Overfishing and under-management continue to threaten groupers so what now?
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article


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