Stabroek News

Regional fishing groups in Atlantic seabob assessment

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Fishing groups from Guyana and Suriname are currently engaged in an assessment of seabob stocks which among other things aims to improve sustainabl­e fishing practices.

To this end, a technical working group of the Caribbean Regional Fisheries Mechanism (CRFM) - the Continenta­l Shelf Fisheries Working Group (CSWG) – is collaborat­ing with the global value chain developmen­t programme – FISH4ACP, private sector processors, and the Seabob Working Groups of Guyana and Suriname, to convene a joint stock assessment workshop in Guyana from 1115 March, a CRFM release stated on Tuesday.

FISH4ACP is a five-year fish value chain developmen­t programme, spanning 2020 to 2025. It is being implemente­d by the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations (FAO) with funding from the European Union and the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t.

It explained that the assessment of the seabob, a short-lived shallow water shrimp found in the Western Central Atlantic, will cover the stocks of Guyana and Suriname, situated in the North Brazilian Shelf Large Marine Ecosystem. As such, the assessment will review and validate the most recent scientific evaluation­s of the Atlantic seabob fisheries of Suriname and Guyana, after which, the results will be shared with industrial and artisanal fishery stakeholde­rs from

Guyana and Suriname for their input during the last two days of the workshop, on 14-15 March.

Further, during the workshop, regional and internatio­nal technical experts will propose harvest control rules (HCRs) and related fisheries management plans, taking into account compliance with Marine Stewardshi­p Council (MSC) certificat­ion requiremen­ts. The seabob fisheries in both Guyana and Suriname are MSC certified; Suriname’s fishery was first certified in 2011 and Guyana’s fishery in 2019.

According to the release, the Seabob Working Groups of Guyana and Suriname which are made up of representa­tives from the respective Fisheries Department­s, the industrial and artisanal seabob sectors, and the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), will subsequent­ly lead the implementa­tion of the outcomes and recommenda­tions from the meeting.

The CRFM CSWG says it aims to promote the sustainabl­e utilisatio­n of continenta­l shelf resources and associated ecosystems through the review and analysis of fisheries and related data, to inform management strategies, consistent with the ecosystem, precaution­ary and participat­ory approaches to fisheries management, the release added.

 ?? ?? The fisheries sector in Guyana provides jobs for thousands of artisanal fishers
The fisheries sector in Guyana provides jobs for thousands of artisanal fishers

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