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Executive summary

1. INTRODUCTION

An International Conference on Integrated Fisheries Monitoring was held in Sydney, Australia, 1-5 February 1999. The Conference, co-hosted by Australia and Canada, was organised in co-operation with the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations and with the support of the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), USA, and the New South Wales Department of Fisheries, Australia (Table 1).

World-wide agencies actively developing and implementing monitoring practices along with local and international industrial representatives and conservation organisations were represented by 160 delegates from 26 Countries (Table 2).

2. BACKGROUND

The FAO/Japan Technical Consultation on Wastage in Fisheries, which was held in Tokyo in 1996, identified the lack of reliable data at a basic level, from the majority of global fisheries, as an area of key concern, particularly when attempting to estimate global discards. The Tokyo meeting highlighted the need to acquire more accurate data on key problems such as the discarding of fish and the incidental mortality of non-target species. One of the principal recommendations of this meeting was that an international conference on fisheries monitoring be held to address these and associated issues.

Table 1. The International conference on Integrated Fisheries Monitoring; The affiliations and responsibilities of the conference Organising Committee:

Organising Committee, International Conference on Integrated Fisheries Monitoring

David Balfour (Co-Chairman) Fisheries Management DG,
Department of Fisheries and Oceans

Canada

Derek Staples (Co-Chairman) Chief of Fisheries and Forestry Division,
Bureau of Rural Sciences

Australia

Peter Cassells Assistant Director,
Department of Agriculture Fisheries and Forestry

Australia

Andrew Duthie Chief, Responsible fishing operations,
Department of Fisheries and Oceans

Canada

Anthony de Fries Scientific co-ordinator,
Australian Fisheries Management Authority

Australia

Aubrey Harris* Bureau of Rural Sciences

Australia

David James Senior Fishery Industry Officer,
FAO

 

Brian Jeffriess President,
Tuna Boat Owners Association

Australia

Steve Kennelly Principal Research Scientist,
New South Wales Fisheries Research Institute

Australia

Conor Nolan** Fisheries Consultant

Ireland

John Witzig Chief, NE Regional Fisheries Statistics Office,
National Marine Fisheries Service

USA

Chief Rapporteur: David Agnew (Imperial College, UK).

* Currently: Senior Fisheries Officer, FAO Sub-Regional Office for Southern Africa
** Formerly: Senior Fisheries Scientist, Falkland Islands (Malvinas).

Table 2. The International conference on Integrated Fisheries Monitoring; Participants by sector.

Country

Applied Researchers

Fishing Industry

Service Providers

NGOs

Total

Australia

56

4

13

9

82

Canada

9

2

12

0

23

New Zealand

6

0

6

0

6

USA

7

0

0

0

7

FAO

5

0

0

0

5

Others

28

0

9

0

37

Total

111

6

34

9

160

Main Representative Agencies; Australia: New South Wales Fisheries, Canada: Department of Fisheries and Oceans, USA: National Marine Fisheries Service, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Recent developments designed to assist in the establishment of responsible fisheries management regimes have also highlighted the need for reliable data collection from fisheries. In particular, both the United Nations Agreement on Highly Migratory Fish Stocks and Straddling Stocks (UNIA) and the FAO Code of Conduct for Responsible Fishing cite the need for the collection of good quality data from fisheries in order that high standards of fisheries research are achieved, and confidence generated in the assessments of target stocks and the subsequent management analyses and strategies.

The Sydney conference approached the challenges and problems of fisheries monitoring common to many fisheries by identifying five main themes and stimulating discussion with invited speakers and panel guests through open forum participation, panel discussion and workshop groups.

A brief overview of the issues, challenges and possible solutions which were discussed in each theme session are presented below.

3. THEME 1: RATIONALE FOR MONITORING PROGRAMMES - CONCEPTUAL AND LEGAL FRAMEWORKS

3.1 Challenge statement: Are the frameworks adequate?

Relevant papers:

Author

Paper title

Nationality

Rice Stock assessment of target species USA
Bjordal Bycatch control through technical regulations and fisheries monitoring Norway
Kennelly Programs in identifying and reducing problematic bycatch Australia
Bevan An integrated conservation and management system Canada
Jeffriess Industry, Education and Public relations Australia
Gladman The rationale for monitoring pirate fishers on the high seas Greenpeace
Tsamenyi Integrated Fisheries Monitoring - the legal framework Solomon Is.
Rohan Ensuring monitoring contributes to meeting objectives Australia
Dunn Overview of managed commercial fisheries in New South Wales Australia

3.2 Operational mechanism

  1. Data collection is within the competence of the fishers;
  2. The activity is accepted as a priority component of operational procedures;
  3. There is no incentive to cheat or falsify records, and
  4. Where the data are validated.

3.3 Responsibility for funding

3.4 Consistency of output

3.5 Observers

3.6 Outstanding problems

  1. There is no uniform delimitation of monitoring obligations of states, or sanctions on failure to discharge those obligations;
  2. There is no uniform standard of data collection quality;
  3. There is no mechanism for exchange of data and information, which necessarily leads to some duplication between organisations/states;
  4. Non-parties and flags of convenience vessels operate outside agreed data collection frameworks, so undermining the increase in data quality achieved by parties to such frameworks;
  5. There are commercial confidentiality concerns, especially with the use of VMS and real time information;
  6. With the increasing and widespread use of observers in national and international monitoring systems, a clear statement of their function should be made in order to ensure awareness of their purpose for both fishers and management agencies, and
  7. The UN Agreement on Highly Migratory Fish Stocks and Straddling Stocks (UNIA) offers a framework for the solution to some of these problems, and its ratification is encouraged.

4. THEME 2: PERSPECTIVES ON MONITORING FROM KEY STAKEHOLDERS

4.1 Challenge statement: Why support monitoring?

Relevant papers:

Author

Paper title

Nationality

Loveday Why support monitoring? - an industry perspective Australia
Matthews Why support monitoring? - an industry perspective Canada
Laurec Monitoring fisheries for better research and/or better enforcement EU
DG XIV
Rice Why support monitoring? - a researcher's perspective Canada
Laubstein Fisheries Observers on Fishing Vessels Sweden

Co-operation and collaboration between stakeholders, leading to a greater degree of user confidence within this group, has the potential to lead to greater information flow between contributing parties and allow further development of accessible databases on basic biological information, stock management issues and fishing strategies. Such a target provides stakeholders with an achievable goal of mutual benefit.

5 THEME 3: DESIGNING, EXECUTING AND ANALYSING MONITORING PROGRAMMES

5.1 Challenge statement (1) : When is enough enough?

Relevant papers:

Author

Paper title

Nationality

Hall What data is needed Argentina
Lewis Monitoring tuna fisheries in the western pacific Canada
Matsuoka Sampling and estimation of discards in multi-species fisheries Japan
Chesson Art of collecting the right amount of data Australia
Punt Evaluating the cost and benefits of alternative monitoring programs for fisheries management Australia
Schirripa Management trade-offs between the directed and undirected fisheries for red snapper in the Gulf of Mexico USA

5.1.1 Outstanding Problems

5.1.2 Summary

5.2 Challenge statement (2): Tools and technology - Putting it together

Relevant Papers:

Author

Paper title

Nationality

Karp & McElderry Catch Monitoring by Fisheries Observers in The United States and Canada USA/Canada
Matthews & Pittman From Logbooks to Laptops Canada
Mejias Vessel monitoring USA
Marshall Electronic monitoring Australia

5.3 Challenge statement (3): What is being done around the world?

Relevant Papers:

Author

Paper title

Nationality

Davis Application of VMS in the Western and Central Pacific Australia
France The functions of the New Zealand Ministry of Fisheries observer programme New Zealand
Smith Monitoring control and surveillance in developing countries FAO
Tilney The status of Integrated fisheries monitoring in South Africa South Africa

6. THEME 4: KEY COMPONENTS AND ISSUES FOR MONITORING PROGRAMMES. (BREAKOUT SESSIONS)

6.1 Challenge statement: Working out solutions to key issues!

6.1.1 Logistics and costs

6.1.2 Confidentiality of information

  1. Fishing operations may benefit by sharing information (reduce bycatch, increase catch);
  2. Increase catch value may be realised by fleet sharing information to control the market;
  3. Information may enhance the fishing industry's image;
  4. Sharing of information may increase safety or in other situations create safety problems;
  5. Private initiatives weather it be gear innovation or personal fishing knowledge must be protected, and
  6. The individual rights of fishermen must be considered.

6.1.3 Improving the quality of fisheries monitoring nationally, regionally and internationally

6.1.4 Cost recovery: or, who pays for monitoring?

  1. Encourage the development of fishery-specific policies for cost recovery among user groups that take account of the various levels of benefit derived from fisheries monitoring;
  2. Make any existing policies accessible as examples of how to go through such a process of policy-development, and
  3. FAO to co-ordinate the development of a generic guide to such policy-development.

6.1.5 Roles of observers - What should they be?

7. THEME 5: INTEGRATED MONITORING - WHERE TO FROM HERE?

7.1 Challenge statement: Working out solutions to key issues

8. CONFERENCE RECOMMENDATION

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