Optimizing Conservation Benefits of Pelagic Marine Protected Areas: Assessing Alternative Timing of the Charleston Bump Time-Area Closure
Abstract
The three-month Charleston Bump time-area closure was implemented in 2001 with the
primary goal of reducing bycatch of juvenile swordfish in the U.S. Atlantic pelagic
longline fishery. Due to this closure and other management measures, the swordfish
stock has since rebuilt, and the fishery is currently underutilized; swordfish landings
are below the recommended quota. To meet consumer demand in the United States, swordfish
are imported from foreign fleets, many of which are not held to the same bycatch reduction
standards as U.S. fisheries. By analyzing the composition of pre and post-closure
catch data, as well as predicting catch per unit effort during the closure, this project
investigates potential temporal alternatives for the closure which would optimize
conservation benefits; increasing domestic catch of swordfish while limiting interactions
with protected and frequently discarded species of sharks, finfish, and sea turtles.
Type
Master's projectPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/14206Citation
Cleaver, Sara (2017). Optimizing Conservation Benefits of Pelagic Marine Protected Areas: Assessing Alternative
Timing of the Charleston Bump Time-Area Closure. Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/14206.Collections
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