Hard cash vs. sustainable needs
Unfortunately, given the serious economic constraints facing the developing countries of the ecoregion and a lack of alternatives, many countries find themselves caught between the development needs of their people and the need to ensure the integrity of their natural resources.
Destructive fishing methods
With more and more boats searching for fewer and fewer fish, there has been a dramatic increase in the use of destructive, habitat-destroying fishing techniques like dynamite, bottom trawling, and beach seining.
The increased fishing has also led to increased capture of endangered marine turtles, juvenile fish, and a massive expansion of the trade in shark and ray fins. The latter is particularly destructive as sharks and rays are at the top of the marine food chain - the lions and leopards of the sea - and stabilize whole marine communities. They reproduce very slowly and have already disappeared from some areas and are seriously depleted in others. To top it all: pirate fishing is also on the rise.
Fewer fish has big impacts
As the amount of available fish goes down, the frequency and severity of conflicts between users go up, leading to serious social as well as economic and ecological problems.
But the governments and artisanal fishers’ groups have inadequate resources to cope with this. Traditional management methods like surveillance patrols, ecological monitoring, or measures to address pollution from both land and sea have met with only limited success because they are simply too costly for the region’s cash-strapped institutions. Clearly, while these efforts continue, other complementary and innovative approaches are urgently called for.
