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TENURE RIGHTS IN LARGE RIVER FISHERIES: PERSPECTIVES AND CHALLENGES by Claudio Baigun

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TENURE RIGHTS IN LARGE RIVER FISHERIES: PERSPECTIVES AND CHALLENGES by Claudio Baigun

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http://www.fao.org/about/meetings/user-rights-2015/speakers/en/


The talk was given at UserRights 2015 (Siem Reap/ Cambodia)

© FAO: http://www.fao.org

http://www.fao.org/about/meetings/user-rights-2015/speakers/en/


The talk was given at UserRights 2015 (Siem Reap/ Cambodia)

© FAO: http://www.fao.org

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TENURE RIGHTS IN LARGE RIVER FISHERIES: PERSPECTIVES AND CHALLENGES by Claudio Baigun

  1. 1. TENURE RIGHTS IN LARGE RIVER FISHERIES: PERSPECTIVES AND CHALLENGES Claudio R. M. Baigún
  2. 2. Fluvial fisheries play a critical role as livelihood thus fishing tenures are fundamental in assuring economic growth, food security, employment, equitable access to resources and poverty alleviation.
  3. 3. Main key differences among coastal (marine) small scale fisheries and fluvial fisheries • The influence of the watershed: Basin drivers have a paramount relevance acting at different temporal and spatial scales
  4. 4. Main key differences among coastal (marine) small scale fisheries and fluvial fisheries • Several large river fisheries are based on migratory species that exhibit complex migratory patterns coupled to flood pulses • Fisheries performance (species/gears/areas/stakeholders/fishing periods) varies according to annual hyrological regime
  5. 5. • If fluvial small scale fisheries differ in a broad sense from marine counterparts, are rights conflicts and tenure governance processess also different?
  6. 6. Problems • External drivers: Artisanal fishers are facing increasing conflicts associated with water and land uses, such as damming, drying of floodplains for urbanization,, agricultural and cattle ranching practices, roads, dredging, etc. all of which reduce fish habitats, limit access to fishing areas and can impact on fisheries quality.
  7. 7. • Tenure conflicts involve the waterscape including land-water interfaces particularly in highly pulsatile systems (Amazon, Orinoco, Meckong, etc.) as floodplains are valuable areas for other productive activities that may affect/complement/compete with fishing as livelihood
  8. 8. Large rivers fragmentation represents the most pervasive impact affecting fisheries sustainability, including strong changes in tenures and fishing rights
  9. 9. How dams could affect tenure rights in large floodplain rivers? More dams and reservoirs will imply: • More impounded water but less productive fisheries • Change in catch composition that cannot be restored by fish passages or stocking in rivers inhabited by not- salmonid species • Replacement of large size and high valuable species by small and less valuable ones implying the loss of socio-economic benefits • The loss of traditional fishing areas and livelihoods by forced eradication
  10. 10. Perspectives • Climate change impacts on more vulnerable fishers and their rights • More deeply discussion on habitats tenure rights as key elements for assuring suitable access to fishing areas • Fisheries as commodities insted of ecological services: Recreational fisheries impacts, fisheries for exportation (Amazon, Parana)
  11. 11. • Need to adopt an EAF/EBFM approach to include new visions of fisheries sustainability encompassing a basin scale perspective and stakeholders participation in policy-making decissions
  12. 12. Thank You

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