Evaluating patterns and drivers of spatial change in the recreational guided fishing sector in Alaska.

Understanding the impacts of recreational fishing on habitats and species, as well as the social and ecological importance of place to anglers, requires information on the spatial distribution of fishing activities. This study documented long-term changes in core fishing areas of a major recreationa...

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Main Authors: Maggie N Chan, Anne H Beaudreau, Philip A Loring
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0179584&type=printable
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author Maggie N Chan
Anne H Beaudreau
Philip A Loring
author_facet Maggie N Chan
Anne H Beaudreau
Philip A Loring
author_sort Maggie N Chan
collection DOAJ
description Understanding the impacts of recreational fishing on habitats and species, as well as the social and ecological importance of place to anglers, requires information on the spatial distribution of fishing activities. This study documented long-term changes in core fishing areas of a major recreational fishery in Alaska and identified biological, regulatory, social, and economic drivers of spatial fishing patterns by charter operators. Using participatory mapping and in-person interviews, we characterized the spatial footprint of 46 charter operators in the communities of Sitka and Homer since the 1990s. The spatial footprint differed between Homer and Sitka respondents, with Homer operators consistently using larger areas for Pacific halibut than Sitka operators. Homer and Sitka showed opposite trends in core fishing location area over time, with an overall decrease in Homer and an overall increase in Sitka. For both Sitka and Homer respondents, the range of areas fished was greater for Pacific halibut than for rockfish/lingcod or Pacific salmon. Spatial patterns were qualitatively different between businesses specializing in single species trips and those that operated multispecies trips and between businesses with one vessel and those with multiple vessels. In Homer, the most frequently cited reasons for changes in the location and/or extent of fishing were changes in trip type and the price of fuel, while in Sitka, the most frequently cited reasons for spatial shifts were changes to Pacific halibut regulations and gaining experience or exploring new locations. The diversity of charter fishing strategies in Alaska may allow individual charter operators to respond differently to perturbations and thus maintain resilience of the industry as a whole to social, environmental, and regulatory change. This research also highlights the importance of understanding fishers' diverse portfolio of activities to effective ecosystem-based management.
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spelling doaj-art-278af0f425ff4282ba4eef75ee2d24ff2025-08-20T02:46:00ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01126e017958410.1371/journal.pone.0179584Evaluating patterns and drivers of spatial change in the recreational guided fishing sector in Alaska.Maggie N ChanAnne H BeaudreauPhilip A LoringUnderstanding the impacts of recreational fishing on habitats and species, as well as the social and ecological importance of place to anglers, requires information on the spatial distribution of fishing activities. This study documented long-term changes in core fishing areas of a major recreational fishery in Alaska and identified biological, regulatory, social, and economic drivers of spatial fishing patterns by charter operators. Using participatory mapping and in-person interviews, we characterized the spatial footprint of 46 charter operators in the communities of Sitka and Homer since the 1990s. The spatial footprint differed between Homer and Sitka respondents, with Homer operators consistently using larger areas for Pacific halibut than Sitka operators. Homer and Sitka showed opposite trends in core fishing location area over time, with an overall decrease in Homer and an overall increase in Sitka. For both Sitka and Homer respondents, the range of areas fished was greater for Pacific halibut than for rockfish/lingcod or Pacific salmon. Spatial patterns were qualitatively different between businesses specializing in single species trips and those that operated multispecies trips and between businesses with one vessel and those with multiple vessels. In Homer, the most frequently cited reasons for changes in the location and/or extent of fishing were changes in trip type and the price of fuel, while in Sitka, the most frequently cited reasons for spatial shifts were changes to Pacific halibut regulations and gaining experience or exploring new locations. The diversity of charter fishing strategies in Alaska may allow individual charter operators to respond differently to perturbations and thus maintain resilience of the industry as a whole to social, environmental, and regulatory change. This research also highlights the importance of understanding fishers' diverse portfolio of activities to effective ecosystem-based management.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0179584&type=printable
spellingShingle Maggie N Chan
Anne H Beaudreau
Philip A Loring
Evaluating patterns and drivers of spatial change in the recreational guided fishing sector in Alaska.
PLoS ONE
title Evaluating patterns and drivers of spatial change in the recreational guided fishing sector in Alaska.
title_full Evaluating patterns and drivers of spatial change in the recreational guided fishing sector in Alaska.
title_fullStr Evaluating patterns and drivers of spatial change in the recreational guided fishing sector in Alaska.
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating patterns and drivers of spatial change in the recreational guided fishing sector in Alaska.
title_short Evaluating patterns and drivers of spatial change in the recreational guided fishing sector in Alaska.
title_sort evaluating patterns and drivers of spatial change in the recreational guided fishing sector in alaska
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0179584&type=printable
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AT annehbeaudreau evaluatingpatternsanddriversofspatialchangeintherecreationalguidedfishingsectorinalaska
AT philipaloring evaluatingpatternsanddriversofspatialchangeintherecreationalguidedfishingsectorinalaska