Seeing the water for the fish: building on perspectives of Lake Victoria

Over the past century, Lake Victoria, in East Africa, has been stage to the most dramatic social, economical and ecological changes: it saw a hundreds-rich diversity of fish species collapse; an introduced predator (Nile perch) invade and become the product of a valuable international fish export trade – a trade that invited an insurge of migrants to work on the lake’s shores. Since the 1990s, there has been an increase in dependence on the lake’s resources – including Nile perch and the other commercial fishes of the lake – and a decrease in the predictability and reliability of these resources. We here use a variety of ecological models to explore how changes in fishing and water quality influence changes in the lake’s food webs and Nile perch stocks. We describe the lake in its social-ecological perspective, and define the makers and breakers of the system’s resilience and recommend holistic and adaptive management policies.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Downing, A.S.
Other Authors: Mooij, Wolf
Format: Doctoral thesis biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:aquatic ecosystems, fishes, food webs, growth, lake victoria, perch, reproduction, water quality, aquatische ecosystemen, groei, rivierbaars, victoriameer, vissen, voedselwebben, voortplanting, waterkwaliteit,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/seeing-the-water-for-the-fish-building-on-perspectives-of-lake-vi
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