开放获取期刊获得更多读者和引用
700 种期刊 和 15,000,000 名读者 每份期刊 获得 25,000 多名读者
Anika Duary*
Global fisheries’ on-going output decreases could have detrimental ecological and socioeconomic effects. As a result, numerous international initiatives have been made to enhance management, minimise overexploitation, and support the preservation of biodiversity and a sustainable food supply. Although these initiatives have gained widespread support, it is still unclear how well the corrective measures have been put into place and are working. We assessed the current adequacy of fisheries administration administrations around the world employing an overview approach, approved with experimental information, and request to over 13,000 fisheries specialists. For each of these regimes, we also calculated the probable sustainability of reported catches to determine how management affects fisheries sustainability. None of these states are also free from the effects of excess fishing capacity, subsidies, or access to foreign fishing. The conversion of scientific advice into policy through a participatory and transparent process, regardless of other attributes of the fisheries, is at the core of achieving fisheries sustainability, according to a comparison of fisheries management attributes with the sustainability of reported fisheries catches. Our findings show how seriously vulnerable fisheries are over the world and how vital it is to adhere to established standards for sustainable management.