Effects of social factors on fishing effort: The case of the Philippine tuna purse seine fishery
Authored by Stella V D Libre, Voorn George A K van, Broeke Guus A ten, Megan Bailey, Paul Berentsen, Simon R Bush
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.fishres.2015.07.033
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Abstract
High fishing effort remains in many of the world's fisheries despite a
variety of policies that have been implemented to reduce it. These
policies have predominantly focused on models of cause and effect that
ignore the possibility that the intended outcomes are altered by social
behavior and bounded rationality of autonomous agents. This paper
presents a spatially explicit agent-based model for the Philippine tuna
purse seine fishery that specifically includes social factors and
bounded rationality in the decision making of agents. The model has been
informed by interviews, and is verified and validated against data.
Sensitivity analysis is used to determine the effects of social factors
and bounded rationality on macro-level outcomes (fishing effort, fish
stock and industry profit). Three social factors are identified to have
considerable effect on these outcomes. These factors are a culturally
and personally motivated resistance to exit the business, a social norm
regarding the spatial distribution of vessels, and the use of imperfect
information by potential entrants in their investment decisions.
Existing fishery policies do not explicitly consider these social
factors. The results suggest that both research and the management of
fishing effort could be improved by viewing fisheries as Complex
Adaptive Systems, in which social factors and bounded rationality have a
considerable effect on the decision making of fishers (fishermen and
fishing companies) and on the macro-level outcomes. (C) 2015 Elsevier
B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Agent-based models
Uncertainty
Management
systems
Guidelines
Sensitivity-analysis