Given limited funds for research and widespread degradation of ecosystems, environmental scientists should geographically target their studies where they will be most effective. However, in academic areas such as conservation and natural resource management there is often a mismatch between the geographic foci of research effort/funding and research needs. The former frequently being focused in the developed world while the latter is greater in the biodiverse countries of the Global South. Here, we adopt a bibliometric approach to test this hypothesis using research on artisanal fisheries. Such fisheries occur throughout the world, but are especially prominent in developing countries where they are important for supporting local livelihoods, food security and poverty alleviation. Moreover, most artisanal fisheries in the Global South are unregulated and unmonitored and are in urgent need of science-based management to ensure future sustainability. Our results indicate that, as predicted, global research networks and centres of knowledge production are predominantly located in developed countries, indicating a global mismatch between research needs and capacity.
Here, we present results from a study conducted in two major shrimp fishing grounds in the Northeastern Brazil Marine Ecoregion (NBME) that determined reproductive dynamics of the penaeid shrimps Xiphopenaeus kroyeri and Penaeus schmitti. We aimed to verify if the current closed season is appropriate and untangle the environmental drivers that control their dynamics. The periods of recruitment and reproduction of both species overlap significantly, with a major spawning peak taking place in the dry season and recruitment in the wet season. The recruitment process in both species seem to be indirectly controlled by the onset of the rainfall season, which triggers an increase in primary productivity. This indirect effect also appears to affect growth increments positively. Our results suggest that both species evolved to recruit in the wet and spawn at the dry season as mechanisms to maximize reproductive fitness. They also highlight the possible negative influence of climate change in tropical shrimp stocks and that the current local regulations must be adjusted to better protect them from overfishing. Therefore, we present multiple possibilities to the closed fishing season (CFS) addressed to local decision-makers and reinforce that environmental parameters and effects of environmental changes should be considered when planning management measures.
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