2019
DOI: 10.1126/science.aav3409
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The small world of global marine fisheries: The cross-boundary consequences of larval dispersal

Abstract: Fish stocks are managed within national boundaries and by regional organizations, but the interdependence of stocks between these jurisdictions, especially as a result of larval dispersal, remains poorly explored. We examined the international connectivity of 747 commercially fished taxonomic groups by building a global network of fish larval dispersal. We found that the world’s fisheries are highly interconnected, forming a small-world network, emphasizing the need for international cooperation. We quantify e… Show more

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Cited by 44 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…It suggests the need of a tight international collaboration between adjacent countries, e.g. Italy, Greece, Croatia and Albania, to ensure efficient fishery spatial management in the Adriatic Sea (Hidalgo et al, 2019;Ramesh et al, 2019). Among the total pool of larvae supplied to the Apulian coast, where professional and recreational fishing occurs, almost of D. sargus larvae and of D. vulgaris…”
Section: Exploiting Connectivity Information For Conservation Purposesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It suggests the need of a tight international collaboration between adjacent countries, e.g. Italy, Greece, Croatia and Albania, to ensure efficient fishery spatial management in the Adriatic Sea (Hidalgo et al, 2019;Ramesh et al, 2019). Among the total pool of larvae supplied to the Apulian coast, where professional and recreational fishing occurs, almost of D. sargus larvae and of D. vulgaris…”
Section: Exploiting Connectivity Information For Conservation Purposesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Generally, alterations to larval supply of fisheries species, particularly recruitment‐limited species, could have severe economic and ecological implications at both global (Ramesh et al. ) and regional scales (e.g., the Dungeness crab Metacarcinus magister Table , Fig. E, F).…”
Section: Population and Community Impactsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Connectivity models now recognize fisheries as "small-world networks" where a few key spawning areas (nodes) supply larvae to many regions thereby increasing the risk of disproportionately widespread impact to regional sustainability from disturbance to just one of these pivotal sites (Claro, Lindeman, Kough, & Paris, 2019). Countries in West Africa, the Caribbean, Oceania, and Northern Europe have been predicted to be most vulnerable to disrupted flow of progeny from FSAs located in waters under the care of other nations, making it critical to understand where these important sites exist and the nature of their interdependencies (Ramesh, Rising, & Oremus, 2019 telemetry, and seascape genetics will help understand regional dispersal and retention patterns, population resilience to disturbance, and efficacy of conservation measures (Munguia-Vega et al, 2014) and assess the recovery potential of extirpated FSAs (Chollett et al, 2020). The geographic range of many tropical fishes is creeping poleward as a result of climate change.…”
Section: Fish Spawning Aggregations Transnational Connectivit Y Andmentioning
confidence: 99%