Small-scale fisheries are declining, reducing food and employment for coastal communities. We assess how biological and socio-economic conditions influence vulnerability, or a community’s susceptibility to loss and ability... [ view full abstract ]
Small-scale fisheries are declining, reducing food and employment for coastal communities. We assess how biological and socio-economic conditions influence vulnerability, or a community’s susceptibility to loss and ability to adapt. We characterized two Philippine fishing communities, Gulod and Buagsong with similar seagrass and fish species composition, and compared their social vulnerability, or pre-existing conditions likely to influence their response to changes in the fishing resource. We used household, fisher, landing and underwater surveys to compare their sensitivity and adaptive capacity.
Depending on the scale assessed, each community and group within the community differed in their social vulnerability. The Buagsong community was less socially vulnerable, or less sensitive to pertubations to the seagrass resource because it was closer to a major urban center that provided salaried income. When we assessed seagrass fishers as a group within each community, we found that Gulod fishers had greater adaptive capacity than Buagsong fishers because they diversified their catch, gear types, and income sources. We found catch that comprised the greatest landing biomass did not have the highest market value, and fishers continued to capture high value items at low biomass levels. A third of intertidal gleaners were women, and they enhanced household adaptive capacity by providing additional food and income, in an otherwise male-dominated fishery.
Community context is not the only determinant of social vulnerability, because groups within the community may decrease their sensitivity, enhance their adaptive capabilities, and reduce social vulnerability by diversifying income sources, seagrass-based catches, and include women in the fishery.
Topics: Fisheries, aquaculture, and the oceans , Topics: Marine food security , Topics: Conservation and management of tropical marine ecosystems