Abstract

Abstract Recreational fisheries are interconnected, complex, adaptive systems characterized by multiple direct and indirect interactions among ecological and human subsystems. This is important for many reasons, including that feedbacks between the social and ecological dimensions lead to difficult-to-predict, often entirely unexpected, outcomes and because many management and governance systems have multiple objectives that can involve social (e.g. fisher satisfaction), economic (e.g. license revenue), and ecological (e.g. fish conservation) dimensions. Embracing a social-ecological-system perspective can usher in an improved era of recreational fisheries science and management. Interdisciplinary approaches that unite experts across disciplines (e.g. social and ecological sciences) to create a unique theoretical, conceptual, and methodological identity are needed to gather crucial information from recreational fishers, quantify and predict fisher behaviours and outcomes from these behaviours, and integrate these findings into fisheries management. In this chapter, we lay the conceptual foundation for recreational fisheries as coupled social-ecological systems that are also complex and adaptive, and discuss the interdisciplinary approach to operationalize this book’s vision.

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Publication Info

Year
2025
Type
book-chapter
Pages
3-19
Citations
4
Access
Closed

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Abigail J. Lynch, Len M. Hunt, Ben Beardmore et al. (2025). Complexity and Integration of Recreational Fisheries. Fish & fisheries series/Fish and fisheries series (Print) , 3-19. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-99739-6_1

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DOI
10.1007/978-3-031-99739-6_1