Fish and Fisheries in Lake Malawi: an Assessment of Four Decades of Management Interventions

Fish and Fisheries in Lake Malawi: an Assessment of Four Decades of Management Interventions

Fish and fisheries in Lake Malawi: an assessment of four decades of management interventions Olaf LF Weyl1, Steve Donda2, Mafaniso Hara3, Friday Njaya2 and Denis Tweddle1 1 South African Institute for Aquatic Biodiversity, South Africa; 2Department of Fisheries, Malawi; 3Institute for Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies (PLAAS), University of the Western Cape, South Africa African Great Lakes Conference 2–5 May 2017 Entebbe, Uganda Malawi • Population 17 million • 160/182 Human Development Index. • 90% of people are below US$2 a day. • Aid/Government expenditure = 164% • High reliance on natural resources • Natural resource management and agriculture are critical intervention areas. • Fishing important for food security and employment. • Small scale fisheries have been monitored since 1976 >200 species harvested Multi gear fisheries Fisheries value chains 1993 the co-management era begins • 1980s crash of the Chambo fishery in Lake Malombe demonstrated that “top-down management had failed completely”. • 1993 co-management was initiated with FAO, UNDP and GTZ (now GIZ) support on Lake Malombe and then on Lake Malawi. 14000 Others 12000 Kambuzi 10000 Chambo 8000 6000 4000 Total catch (tons) 2000 0 76 78 80 82 84 86 88 90 92 Year “...participatory fisheries management has proven to be the most appropriate method to manage the fish resources in the lakes of Malawi.” (Fisheries Policy 1999) FAO & GIZ interventions Lake Malawi Status 2002 • Decreasing CPUE • Stable yields maintained by increasing effort. • Depletion of high value fish • Chambo fishery decreased from 5000 t/y to 2000 t/y. • Effort reduction recommended. Chambo restoration plan (2005) targets redirection of fishing effort to “under-exploited” offshore stocks. Stock Area Author Biomass Yield Sustaina (% B) ble yield Demersal stocks Deep demersal South East Arm (C) 1994-96 Banda & 6,040 30 1,812 (>50m) South West Arm 1994-96 Tόmasson 1997 7,220 30 2,166 Domira Bay 1994-95 Banda& Tόmasson 6,865 30 2,060 Chia to Nkhotakota 1994 1996 850 30 255 Nkhotakota to Dwangwa 1994 1,050 30 315 Dwangwa to Sanga 1994 3,570 30 1,071 Ngara to Lufira 1981 Tweddle 1981 1,588 45 715 Total 27,183 8,394 Offshore pelagic stocks Diplotaxodon Lake Malawi Menz & 119,700 19 22,700 Rhamphochromis Thompson 1995 16,800 17 2,800 Copadichromis 8,700 16 1,400 Other cichlids 3,400 18 600 Engraulicypris 5,100 63 3,200 Opsaridium 1,300 23 300 Synodontis 13,400 17 2,300 Total 168,400 33,300 Total 41,694 (after Seymour 2001) Indications that artisanal fishery was already there • In southern Lake Malawi, pelagic and deep water cichlids from deep set (>50m) small meshed gill nets began to dominate gill net catches in 2000. Mesh2 5000 Mesh3 Mesh4 4000 3000 8000 Number of gear 2000 7000 Others Catfishes 1000 6000 Pelagic cichlids 0 5000 A BE BW SW Demersal cichlids Area 4000 Chambo ) -1 6 8 (A) (BE) 3000c 5 a 7 a 2000 Total catchTotal (tons) 4 6 1000 3 b 5 b 0 2 4 b 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 CPUE (kg. 100m net. set 1 3 GN2 GN3 GN4 GN2 GN3 GN4 Year Offshore Chilimira fishery had also adapted • Target species of the “offshore” chilimira net fishery increasingly contained pelagic cichlids. • In shallower areas this “off- shore” fishery actively targeted inshore species e.g. chambo. • We cautioned that expansion in these fisheries might not lead to the desired objectives. 15000 2006: Lake Malawi Artisanal BOATS Fisheries Development Project 10000 5000 14,000 • Facilitate harvest of “unexploited” 0 stocks and move the inshore 60000 FISHERS fishery. 40000 • New plank boats, new fishing 20000 47,000 equipment, landing sites and 0 marketing. 60000 GILL NETS • Effort increased in all fisheries 40000 20000 except the beach seine fishery. COUNT 5,000 Km 0 1500 BEACH 1000 SEINES 500 700 0 4000 PELAGIC 3000 SEINES 2000 1000 3,300 0 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 YEAR Total catch increased to >50,000 t 80000 80000 Tilapiines Tilapiines 60000 Haplochromines 60000 Usipa Haplochromines 40000 Other Usipa Total catch 40000 20000 Other Total catch 0 20000 1980 1990 2000 2010 Year 0 1980 1990 2000 2010 Year Increasing reliance on small pelagic usipa • Usipa is driving fishery 2.5 • Cichlid CPUE is 2.0 declining. 1.5 • Not surprising (K- 1.0 strategists). 0.5 CPUE (t/fisher/year) • Usipa stock dynamics 0.0 are environment driven. 2.0 • Bad years can follow 1.5 good years and the 1.0 fishing fleet is likely to switch target species. 0.5 CPUE (t/fisher/year) 0.0 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Year Current interventions avoid effort reduction • 2014-2019: USAID “Fisheries Integration of Society and Habitats FISH Project (USAID) • Knowledge Shared: Systems & processes established, peer reviewed and shared, utilizing science for “evidence based decision making” and informed management solutions. • Capacity Enabled: Institutions in “nested governance structures” from Beach Village Committees (BVC), District to National level empowered, able to influence and participate in the co-management of fishery ecosystems. • 2015: Recent management suggestions (Various projects) • Sanctuaries, aquaculture production and stocking. Thank you.

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