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Impacts of fishing by dewatering on fish assemblages of tropical floodplain wetlands: A matter of frequency and context
Authors:Sarah M Martin  Kai Lorenzen  Robert I Arthur  Phaisane Kaisone  Kanthavong Souvannalangsy
Institution:aDivision of Biology, Imperial College London, Silwood Park, UK;bSchool of Forest Resources and Conservation, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32653, USA;cMRAG Ltd., 18 Queen Street, London W1J 5PN, UK;dLivestock and Fisheries Section of Savannakhet Province, Savannakhet, Lao Democratic People’s Republic;eAsian Institute of Technology, Klong Luang, Pathumthani 12120, Thailand
Abstract:Tropical floodplain wetlands and the fish communities they support are subject to great pressure from human demands for water and aquatic living resources. In densely populated agricultural areas where such pressures are greatest, floodplain wetlands may be dewatered for the dual purpose of crop irrigation and fish harvesting. Viewed as highly destructive to fish communities, the practice is widely discouraged but remains common. We investigated the impacts of dewatering on fish abundance and assemblage structure in permanent floodplain wetlands of the lower Mekong region. Draining was carried out only in wetlands where access for fishing and water withdrawal was exclusive to individual households or groups, and where fishing was restricted to draining events. Subsequently, the impacts of draining were found to be equivalent to those of intensive fishing, rather than entirely catastrophic. Many wetlands were drained and fished repeatedly in a single dry season, with catches declining by 72% on average between consecutive events. Species richness and mean length of fish also declined with consecutive dewatering events. Fish biomass was higher in drained wetlands prior to the first and second draining events than in open access, non-drained wetlands. These surprising results suggest that draining of floodplain wetlands is not as fundamentally destructive to fish populations as is often assumed. Where fishing pressure under open access conditions is high, allocation of exclusive rights to fish and dewater wetlands can aid fish conservation as long as dewatering is carried out only once.
Keywords:Dewatering  Floodplain fisheries  Hoovering gears  Irrigation  Lao PDR  Tropical
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