Abstract

Abstract Recreational fisheries management requires making decisions that consider social, economic, and ecological dimensions. The feedbacks among ecological changes and social responses by fishers create complexity and uncertainty. However, uncertainty can impede the integration of ecological and social dimensions, particularly when considering human behavioural responses to management decisions and ecological changes. One of the few ways to reduce these uncertainties is via experimentation at the system level. Adaptive management (and the larger umbrella of decision analysis) provides a framework to implement purposeful management experiments in a structured manner to learn through an iterative decision process, thereby allowing for the reduction in social and ecological uncertainties in response to planned policy interventions. We discuss the theory of adaptive management and conditions for which it is appropriate, as well as the benefits and costs of applying active versus passive adaptive management to reduce social and ecological uncertainties for recreational fisheries. We then provide key examples from previous studies on decisions for zoning in the Great Barrier Reef, Australia, stocking decisions that include stakeholder learning in Germany, and decisions for stocking and harvest management in British Columbia, that demonstrate best practices for implementation of adaptive management to reduce uncertainties surrounding human behaviour and other social and ecological objectives related to recreational fisheries.

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Publication Info

Year
2025
Type
book-chapter
Pages
719-746
Citations
5
Access
Closed

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Kelly Robinson, Robert Arlinghaus, Edward V. Camp et al. (2025). Adaptive Management for Recreational Fisheries Decisions in the Face of Uncertainty. Fish & fisheries series/Fish and fisheries series (Print) , 719-746. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-99739-6_23

Identifiers

DOI
10.1007/978-3-031-99739-6_23