WHAT ARE ARTISANAL FISHERIES?

Artisanal or small-scale fishers and fisheries use smaller open-skiff boats and primarily operate within a day's boat drive from the coast. These fisheries employ different gear types that target species consumed locally and mainly distributed to domestic markets. Sometimes, they also distribute their product to international markets.
Artisanal fishers do not use highly industrialized equipment or boats (typically < 10m in length), operating within territorial waters of individual countries, often quite close to the coastal communities the fishers call home.
Video by Davis Arenas
Furthermore, artisanal fishing communities sometimes develop community-based management systems to steward their resources within existing regulatory frameworks. Community-based management systems provide fishers with the autonomy and responsibility for how best to manage their resources.
Small-scale fishing is subsistence-based, and small-scale fishing communities worldwide rely mainly on fishing for employment and food.

ARTISANAL FISHERIES IN MEXICO

Mexico has a territorial extension of more than 5 million km² (1,930,511 mi²), including a maritime surface of approx. 3.1 million km² (1,196,916 mi²), including its territorial sea and Exclusive Economic Zone.
Mexico boasts a great variety of coastal and marine systems within its territorial waters: 12,500 km² (4,826.2 mi²) of coastal lagoons, made of 160 coastal lagoon systems with an approximate 12,779 km² (4,934 mi²). One hundred eleven of those lagoons are in the Pacific Ocean, where this project takes place, with an estimated surface of 6,299 km² (2,432 mi²). MarEs Comunidad works in many of these Pacific lagoons.
According to the RNPA (Registro National de Pesca y Acuacultura - National Registry of Fisheries and Aquaculture in English) (4), the Mexican fishing fleet counts 76,306 registered vessels, of which 74,286 are artisanal vessels.
The artisanal sector represents 70% of the total fishing population, with 222,858 fishers; 108,684 registered in the nine states where the "MarEs Comunidad" project operates.
However, official numbers often underrepresent the number of fishing fleets operating in the country due to:
  • Their high number.
  • How many years can they be used.
  • The ability of the fishing cooperatives or owners to repair them.
  • The difficulty in maintaining updated records.

ARTISANAL FISHING TECHNIQUES AND EQUIPMENT

There is an enormous diversity of fishing gears, styles, and traditions even among fishing communities within a region or country. Small-scale fishers often use different fishing gears during the same year or even season, depending on what they want to catch.
Find below the examples of the types of fishing that artisanal fishers in Mexico use.

ARTISANAL FISHING AND SEA TURTLES

Sea turtles have been a part of artisanal fishers' lives for several generations, both economically and culturally.
Over the years, fishers across Mexico have re-explored and re-shaped their relationship with sea turtles, actively increasing their collaboration with organizations that carry out sea turtle conservation activities. These shifting perspectives have positively impacted sea turtles when there is a lot of fishing activity in areas that are important for sea turtles to feed or breed.
Although bycatch is an ongoing concern, fishers' efforts and willingness to work with researchers, volunteers, and N.G.O.s that work for sea turtle population recovery have proven pivotal. Fishers' knowledge of the sea, fishing practices, and skills have facilitated many conservation activities such as sea turtle monitoring, tagging, rescue, and recovery.

COLLABORATING WITH ARTISANAL FISHERS FOR A HEALTHIER SEA TURTLE POPULATION

Artisanal fisheries and fishing communities are tightly linked to the health of marine ecosystems and resources, making them particularly vulnerable to habitat degradation and resource depletion. However, because artisanal fishing operates at very narrow profit margins, sustainable fishing practices must balance resource conservation goals with the assurance of stable livelihoods for fishers and their communities.
This is why we focus on three approaches to reduce the bycatch of sea turtles and develop the most effective and feasible measures in several coastal communities in Pacific Mexico.

1. REDUCE FISHING PRESSURE

Aim to reduce the overall fishing pressure, particularly on fishing gears most dangerous for bycatch species, by:
  • Supporting fishers switching to alternative fishing gears that are less dangerous for sea turtles but still allow fishers to maintain the amount and value of their desired catch.
  • Developing alternative revenue streams that allow fishers to be more selective about when and what they fish and under which conditions.

2. REDUCE THE FREQUENCY OF BYCATCH INTERACTIONS

Through modifications in how, where, and when fishers use their fishing gears, many interactions with sea turtles can be avoided, thus reducing the overall frequency of bycatch events.
To achieve this, we work with fishing communities to promote sustainable fishing practices, such as permanently adopting bycatch reduction technologies that reduce interactions with sea turtles.
These technologies are gear modifications and techniques being developed, tested, and implemented as gear modification and methods identified during the community and fisherfolk experience exchanges.

3. REDUCE THE SEVERITY OF BYCATCH INTERACTIONS

For bycatch interactions that cannot be avoided, collaborative workshops and training build capacity among fishers to:
  • Safely handle turtles accidentally captured in their gear.
  • Assist and monitor their recovery.
  • Release them when appropriate.
These actions reduce the severity of bycatch interactions, thus improving sea turtle survival.

OUR ULTIMATE GOALS WHEN COLLABORATING WITH SMALL-SCALE FISHERIES ARE:

  • Promote sustainable fishing practices that will support coastal communities.
  • Support alternative livelihood opportunities to fishing.
  • Promote healthier sea turtle populations throughout Pacific Mexico.

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MEET THE TURTLES

Loggerhead (Caretta caretta) and leatherback (Dermochelys coriacea) turtles are two of the five sea turtle species present in the Eastern Pacific. Both species are endangered for several reasons, with bycatch in artisanal fisheries as a primary threat.

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WHAT IS BYCATCH? WHY DOES IT MATTER?

Bycatch refers to the incidental hooking or entanglement of non-target species such as sea turtles, marine mammals, and seabirds in commercial and artisanal fishing gear. These animals are usually discarded because they are often protected and rarely have food or commercial value.

Bycatch is one of the most severe threats to the recovery and conservation of sea turtle populations.

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APPROACHES TO REDUCE BYCATCH

Explore the different approaches we are co-creating and implementing with fishing communities to reduce bycatch, promote healthy sea turtle populations, and foster long-lasting, sustainable fishing practices.

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