Outlook Online 2009

Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority :: Interaction of fishing with herbivory

Interaction of fishing with herbivory

Management Concern: Moderate    

Adequacy of Information: Low

Summary extracts from Outlook Report 2009

  • Populations of herbivorous fish are healthy and generally not under pressure; however larger herbivores, like dugongs, have declined along the urban coast.
  • Fish are the main herbivores on the Great Barrier Reef and, importantly, are not targeted in commercial or recreational fisheries. However, two of the largest herbivores in the Great Barrier Reef ecosystem, dugongs and green turtles, were previously extensively harvested within the Great Barrier Reef region, severely reducing their populations. Today, direct use of the region is still contributing to the cumulative impacts on these populations (e.g. through by-catch in fishing gear, poaching, boat strikes, ingestion of marine debris).

What do we know?

Relevant pages from Outlook Online include:

Existing policies and management actions

Future management requirements

  • Planned development of a GBRMPA Position Statement on herbivorous fish
  • Biodiversity strategy

Defined research questions

  • There are currently no defined research questions for this topic. Research questions will be developed, giving priority to interactions/issues that are of most concern to management.

Related information

 

Bookmark and Share

Have your say