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Study: Protecting Fisheries Helps To Alleviate Poverty

February 28, 2019 |

This article was originally published on Conservation International


“For many people in developing countries, freshwater fisheries are their lifeline. In Cambodia, for example, millions of people rely directly on the Tonlé Sap lake, the largest lake in Southeast Asia, for their food and income. But overfishing has depleted stocks of fish there, perpetuating poverty in one of the region’s poorest countries.

So, how to boost fish stocks without hampering people’s ability to eat and make a living? One answer is to establish freshwater protected areas, new research finds.

study recently published in the journal Ecological Modeling by Lee Hannah, senior scientist for climate change biology at Conservation International, and co-authors, found that establishing protected areas within freshwater fisheries can actually help pull local communities out of the poverty cycle.

Like their better-known marine counterparts, Hannah says, freshwater protected areas don’t benefit just wildlife. The study shows they’re good for people, too. Human Nature interviewed Hannah to explain…”

Journal source: Ecological Modeling.

Read on at: Conservation International.

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