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Review of the causes of the rise of the illegal South African abalone fishery and consequent closure of the rights-based fishery
Authors:Serge Raemaekers  Maria HauckMarkus Bürgener  Angus MackenzieGenevieve Maharaj  Éva E Plagányi  Peter J Britz
Institution:a Environmental Evaluation Unit, University of Cape Town, Private Bag X3, Rondebosch 7701, Cape Town, South Africa1
b Department of Ichthyology and Fisheries Science, P.O. Box 94, Rhodes University, Grahamstown 6140, South Africa2
c TRAFFIC East/Southern Africa, South Africa
d Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Branch Fisheries, Private Bag X2, Roggebaai 8012, South Africa
e Department of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics, University of Cape Town, South Africa
Abstract:The rise of organised illegal fishing and trade in abalone from the late 1990s destabilised South Africa’s historically stable, quota-managed fishery, culminating in its closure in 2008. The development of the fishery is described in a historical context, including the evolution of South Africa’s science-based abalone fishery management system. The diverse suite of responses deployed to combat illegal fishing and the black market trade in abalone are reviewed, including;- fishery reform to expand rights to a greater number of previously disadvantaged fishers, a territorial user rights fishery (TURF) system, special compliance operations and courts, the CITES listing of abalone, and the serial reduction in the TAC, culminating in the controversial and legally contested closure of the fishery. The main causes of the rise of the illegal fishery are diagnosed as 1) the massive increase in the abalone price that occurred in the 1990s triggering an abalone fishing “gold-rush” and 2) the failure of the post-Apartheid fishery reform process to accommodate many traditional fishers in a legal fishing rights framework resulting in them operating outside the formal fishery management system. By contextualising the abalone fishery as a complex system, embedded in South Africa’s socio-political setting, we show how the resource focussed fishery management system did not have the capacity to incorporate the powerful social, political and economic drivers determining fisher behaviour. We conclude with the need to revisit South Africa’s abalone fishery management paradigm, and argue that a more integrated governance approach is required that takes into account the biological, socio-political and economic factors determining the fishery activities.
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