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1 amework to a tightly coupled SES, commercial fishing.
2 point for PIPA equivalent to 1.5 y of banned fishing.
3 and four emission scenarios with and without fishing.
4 sing concerns about the ecosystem impacts of fishing.
5 l fishing but increasing during recreational fishing.
6 venues and were also more likely to continue fishing.
7  a long-term decrease in harvest due to over-fishing.
8 t the population level appeared resilient to fishing.
9 y occupation affected their participation in fishing.
10 ime points to examine how illness influenced fishing.
11 nthropogenic stressors such as pollution and fishing.
12 of marine reserves, areas that are closed to fishing.
13 l, structure, and characteristics of illegal fishing.
14  closing large parts of the Pacific Ocean to fishing.
15  monitor, and inform solutions to reduce IUU fishing.
16 ommercial fisheries, communities and vessels fishing a greater diversity of species have less revenue
17 asing specialization over the last 30 years, fishing a set of permits with higher species diversity r
18 s, behavioural changes in GRD in response to fishing activities, and diel overlap between GRD and fis
19 e main prey item and also during the peak of fishing activities, in the rainy season.
20     The nylon fibers appear to be from human fishing activities, suggesting options for management.
21 xes by which fishers in Alaska can diversify fishing activities.
22 ho depend on diverse and largely unregulated fishing activities.
23 1-2016), and develop a system for predicting fishing activity accounting for oceanic variables, clima
24            Concurrently, mass disruptions to fishing activity are common following disasters such as
25                   Linking pelagic habitat to fishing activity provides high-resolution decision aids
26 a high-resolution dataset of satellite-based fishing activity to show that anticipation of an impendi
27  among dolphins exposed to anthropopressure (fishing activity), risking social behaviour impairment i
28 activities, and diel overlap between GRD and fishing activity.
29  reduces individual revenue variability, and fishing an additional permit is associated with higher r
30  a historical period dominated by commercial fishing and a contemporary period when commercial fishin
31 c and environmental impacts of provisions of fishing and agricultural capital, with and without enfor
32 ory changes may reduce fishes' resilience to fishing and ecosystems' resistance to environmental vari
33     This suggests that local factors such as fishing and pollution are having minimal effects or that
34 rios due to the cumulative effect of reduced fishing and predation mortalities cascading through the
35 om shoelaces to the knots used for climbing, fishing and sailing(1).
36    Illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing and seafood supply chain fraud are multifaceted
37      An integrated ecosystem model including fishing and the impact of rising temperatures, relative
38 d to societies including coastal protection, fishing, and cultural practices.
39 subsistence lifestyle of hunting, gathering, fishing, and farming with few cardiovascular risk factor
40 r efficiency is highly variable, impacted by fishing, and will decline with climate change.
41 MAX model suggested was linked to changes in fishing; and the Norwegian trench region displayed an in
42 ept study using an in silico/in vitro target fishing approach on the fungal secondary metabolite atro
43 f orphan compounds using a so-called "target fishing" approach.
44 ns as proportions of fishing time (days) and fishing area (spatial cells).
45 ectivity patterns of the EIE with industrial fishing areas and coastline regions of the Pacific basin
46 urrents and that their potential benefits to fishing areas are presently limited, since countries wit
47 nal concentration of fishing effort, size of fishing areas, density of vessels, their mobility and th
48                    The emergence of longline fishing around the world has been concomitant with an in
49                                Using termite fishing as a window into the richness of chimpanzee cult
50         Illness among individuals who listed fishing as their primary occupation affected their parti
51 y can be altered by a switch to recreational fishing, as well as stocking and invasive species.
52 pulations, especially if combined with shark fishing bans.
53                We provide a national illegal fishing baseline for Chile, estimating illegal activity
54 ed; and illegal, unregulated, and unreported fishing becomes more sophisticated.
55 classify these characteristics into discrete fishing behavioral types (FBTs), determining that 3 type
56 etwork contacts are more strongly related to fishing behaviors than ethnicity.
57 e providing poor fishing households with new fishing boats (fishing capital) that can be used further
58 ends not only on the magnitude of changes in fishing but also on the pace at which changes are impose
59 some extent FiB) declining during commercial fishing but increasing during recreational fishing.
60  from density dependence post-harvest, and a fishing-by-warming interaction that decreased diversity
61 pecies and their associated fauna [1], while fishing can alter coastal food webs, reduce biodiversity
62 onary responses to intensive, size-selective fishing can rapidly and continuously destabilize and deg
63 o limit fishing pressure rather than enhance fishing capacity.
64 r fishing households with new fishing boats (fishing capital) that can be used further offshore as a
65   Using a repeated cross-sectional survey of fishing captains to assess potential social impacts of t
66 ng and a contemporary period when commercial fishing ceased and recreational fishing effort increased
67          Median HIV prevalence was higher in fishing communities (42%, range 38-43) than in trading (
68                                     Although fishing communities (FCs) in Uganda are disproportionate
69  years in four high-prevalence Lake Victoria fishing communities and 36 neighbouring inland communiti
70 ial and ecological data from five coral reef fishing communities in Kenya; including interviews with
71 , and 8.63 in those aged 20-24 years), among fishing communities in Uganda (12.40 per 100 person-year
72 nation HIV interventions in HIV-hyperendemic fishing communities is feasible and could have a substan
73 and low use of combination HIV prevention in fishing communities make these populations a priority fo
74                    Here, we add nine termite-fishing communities not studied before, revealing 38 dif
75  of people aged 15-49 years residing in four fishing communities on Lake Victoria.
76 isheries catch and revenue data from Alaskan fishing communities over 34 years to test whether divers
77 ificantly higher in men than in women and in fishing communities than in other community types.
78 significantly lower in both men and women in fishing communities than in trading (age-adjusted preval
79 s depend on the extent to which markets link fishing communities to outside regions through trade.
80  In a cluster-randomized trial in 26 Ugandan fishing communities we investigated effects of community
81  (2703 [13.7%] in inland and 2439 [40.1%] in fishing communities).
82  impact in high-schistosomiasis-transmission fishing communities, in the absence of other interventio
83 e conducted a cluster-randomised trial in 26 fishing communities, Lake Victoria, Uganda.
84 uption were pervasive throughout New England fishing communities.
85 ed in agrarian, 3318 in trading, and 3870 in fishing communities.
86 heries approaches, while supporting thriving fishing communities.
87                             For a Philippine fishing community that is a net importer of fish, we sho
88                                              Fishing constrains phenotypic responses of marine fish t
89  growth rate, fish mobility, fish price, and fishing cost) as well as an important aspect of reserve
90 ting the investigation of chimpanzee termite-fishing culture.
91 del development include dynamic scenarios of fishing, cumulative human impacts, and the effects of ma
92 atly between fisheries from 0 to >50% of the fishing days and area.
93                                              Fishing did not substantially alter the effects of clima
94 d effects on estuarine communities following fishing disruptions and salinity changes caused by a tro
95 mcoe dating back to the 1860s, to examine if fishing down effects are observed in this highly exploit
96  yet do not appear to commonly show the same fishing down response perhaps because time series are to
97 creasing biomass, contrary to predictions of fishing down the food web [7].
98                    This effect, described as fishing down the marine food web, is observed when the t
99 ally children misjudge the risk potential of fishing due to their lack of experience.
100                                      Whereas fishing effects on predators indirectly altered plankton
101 y to have boosted our ancestors' hunting and fishing efficiency [3], marking a major transition in hu
102                          Empirical models of fishing effort and bioeconomic simulations explain why q
103                    The cumulative effects of fishing effort and interactions among krill-dependent pr
104 actors, we analyzed the effect of illness on fishing effort and methods.
105  to fish, trophic transfer efficiencies, and fishing effort can quantitatively reconcile this contras
106 ity of information on growth, mortality, and fishing effort for devil rays make quantifying populatio
107 imited spatial refuge from current levels of fishing effort in marine areas beyond national jurisdict
108 n commercial fishing ceased and recreational fishing effort increased.
109 nd find that fishers more than doubled their fishing effort once this area was earmarked for eventual
110 able alternative to fishing, such that total fishing effort remains constant (at best).
111                               The additional fishing effort resulted in an impoverished starting poin
112 small-scale fisheries, a synthesis of global fishing effort, and plankton food web energy flux estima
113 s C, rather than changes in trophic state or fishing effort, have restructured the pelagic food web o
114  influenced by the seasonal concentration of fishing effort, size of fishing areas, density of vessel
115  et al were improperly scaled to account for fishing effort, thereby invalidating the analysis.
116 to comparing aggregate rent, stock size, and fishing effort, we focus on the occurrence, size, and lo
117 nstructed the evolution of the fleet and its fishing effort.
118 lso associated with significant increases in fishing effort.
119  found limited evidence that illness reduced fishing effort.
120 ween animal movements and distributions, and fishing effort.
121 eases to the seaweed communities and reduced fishing efforts were the primary factors associated with
122 rom the climatic mean decreases county-level fishing employment by 13%, on average.
123 (95% CI: 10% to 22%) decline in county-level fishing employment in New England, beyond the changes in
124 e administrative data documenting individual fishing events to evaluate the economic impact of the ex
125  between years, highlighting how broadly the fishing exploitation efficiently "tracks" oceanic sharks
126 tentially increasing shark susceptibility to fishing exploitation.
127 ies have less revenue variability than those fishing fewer species.
128                     We found that the global fishing fleet doubled between 1950 and 2015-from 1.7 to
129            While forced labor in the world's fishing fleet has been widely documented, its extent rem
130                   By 2015, 68% of the global fishing fleet was motorized.
131 the fish stock) and human system (the mobile fishing fleet) confound "treated" and "control" areas.
132 f these two monuments on the Hawaii longline fishing fleet.
133           Previous reconstructions of marine fishing fleets have aggregated data without regard to th
134 ntire Spanish and Portuguese longline-vessel fishing fleets show an 80% overlap of fished areas with
135 d tactics are used across disparate regions, fishing fleets, and taxonomic groups.
136 acked movements of pelagic sharks and global fishing fleets, that 24% of the mean monthly space used
137                                     Derelict fishing gear (DFG) is abundant across the remote North P
138 t study showed that underwater entrapment in fishing gear followed by rapid decompression may cause g
139     Deaths from bycatch drowning of Scaup in fishing gear have significantly decreased in recent deca
140          Incidental capture, or 'bycatch' in fishing gear is a major global threat to sea turtle popu
141        The incidental capture of wildlife in fishing gear presents a global conservation challenge.
142 ection from anthropogenic threats like fixed fishing gear, shipping, and noise pollution.
143 ciated with ship strikes and entanglement in fishing gear.
144                                 Because many fishing gears are nonselective, and the costs of making
145 ding the probabilities of dying in different fishing gears.
146 douin's gull, that die in different types of fishing gears: longlines, gillnets and sport trolling, r
147                                   Commercial fishing generally removes large and old individuals from
148                                              Fishing glasses should be worn not only for UV protectio
149 y (SBNMS) in the Gulf of Maine is a historic fishing ground renowned for remarkable productivity.
150  in convergence zones that coincide with the fishing grounds of the Hawai'i-based pelagic longline fi
151 urbance event which closed the most-utilized fishing grounds, explorers benefited significantly from
152 within MPAs as they move outside to adjacent fishing grounds.
153  more of locally produced larvae to adjacent fishing grounds.
154 e and qualitative trends within the longline fishing grounds.
155       Our results indicate that recreational fishing had large effects on fish populations that casca
156 estabilize and degrade ecosystems even after fishing has ceased.
157  Our results reveal the profound impact that fishing has had on reef shark populations: we observed n
158                   Indiscriminate and intense fishing has occurred in many marine ecosystems around th
159 hlight the complex and profound effects that fishing has on marine ecosystems.
160 erviews with 392 rural fishers, we show that fishing has severely depleted a large-bodied keystone fi
161 ch waters, but climate change and industrial fishing have depleted forage fish stocks in this system
162 lines in real income benefits of 2-63%, with fishing households suffering the largest declines.
163 Many developing countries are providing poor fishing households with new fishing boats (fishing capit
164       In size-structured aquatic ecosystems, fishing impacts are commonly quantified using size spect
165 otential for developing our understanding of fishing impacts in coral reef ecosystems.
166                                Yet how krill fishing impacts nutrient fertilisation and the carbon si
167  are a commonly applied tool to reduce human fishing impacts on marine and coastal ecosystems.
168 used to help reduce biologically significant fishing impacts on small cetaceans.
169 form an ecosystem-based approach to managing fishing impacts.
170  which closes 80% of their EEZ to commercial fishing in 2020.
171                      Concerns over increased fishing in concentrated areas and ongoing efforts to est
172 ndemic molluscs began well before commercial fishing in Lake Tanganyika, Africa's deepest and oldest
173                  At the same time, intensive fishing in regions where rivers are already degraded by
174 in community metrics exceeded the effects of fishing in this highly dynamic study site, suggesting th
175                      We suggest that termite fishing in wild chimpanzees shows some elements of cumul
176 rom catch data, mean trophic level (MTL) and fishing-in-balance (FiB), and compared trends between a
177 ion is dominated by litter from the regional fishing industry (83%) and flip-flops from further afiel
178 t an historical account of the growth of the fishing industry and an update on the status of fish pop
179 ds used to routinely assess freshness in the fishing industry reflect more a state of spoilage than a
180  the impacts of these protected areas on the fishing industry, but there has been no ex post empirica
181  had little, if any, negative impacts on the fishing industry, corroborating ecological models that h
182 riment that created a controlled gradient of fishing intensity and assessed the immediate impacts and
183                                   Commercial fishing is a dangerous occupation despite decades of reg
184 e illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing is a premier issue facing ocean sustainability,
185 and that survivability of returns from creel fishing is high.
186 d intensity of age truncation indicates that fishing is likely reducing the stability of many marine
187 s are too short to witness early depletions, fishing is often recreational, or other factors like sto
188  pressure but also more prone to recovery as fishing is reduced.
189                                              Fishing is widely considered a leading cause of biodiver
190 ental-contact recreation (boating, canoeing, fishing, kayaking, and rowing) on waterways in the Chica
191 ive evidence linking climate variability and fishing labor has important implications for management
192 d distributions worldwide, yet its impact on fishing labor has not been examined.
193 rticular due to climate change but also from fishing, land-based pollution and shipping.
194  which earns much of its GDP by selling tuna fishing licenses to foreign nations.
195 supercoiled natural rubber fibers and coiled fishing line fibers that cool when stretched.
196 were caught by trawl fishing, longlining and fishing line from December 2012 to October 2013.
197 al rubber, nickel titanium, and polyethylene fishing line.
198        We analysed tensile properties of the fishing lines of the New Zealand glowworm Arachnocampa l
199 C, relative humidity of 98%) whereby the wet fishing lines only show a bonding ability at high relati
200              Pufferfish were caught by trawl fishing, longlining and fishing line from December 2012
201                                      Without fishing, mean global animal biomass decreased by 5% (+/-
202           Instead, ill fishers shifted their fishing methods.
203                The model is driven solely by fishing mortality and climatic variables and based on ti
204                        Our analysis of adult fishing mortality and spawning stock biomass of 22 North
205 that both the temporal and spatial scales in fishing mortality and spawning stock biomass were equiva
206 ularly influential in whether stock size and fishing mortality are currently in or trending toward de
207 individual movement traits can contribute to fishing mortality of sharks found within MPAs as they mo
208 imized management, or an arbitrarily defined fishing mortality outside the MPA's boundaries.
209 y partially substantial reductions (>50%) in fishing mortality resulting from small increases in MPA
210 ge at maturity, maximum age, and natural and fishing mortality.
211 he management systems by species of 28 major fishing nations and examined influences of economic, geo
212                          Proximity to active fishing net also had a pronounced effect on state occupa
213 seals foraging was highest <5 km from active fishing nets (51%) and decreased as distance to nets inc
214  However, seals used sites <5 km from active fishing nets only 3% of their time at sea highlighting a
215 ronmental covariates and proximity to active fishing nets within a multivariate hidden Markov model (
216                       In the Caribbean, over-fishing of large herbivorous fish and disease among the
217 sing use of the deep ocean (e.g., for bottom fishing, oil and gas extraction, and deep-seabed mining)
218 anagement measures that reduce the impact of fishing on age truncation, including no-take areas, slot
219 ing no-take areas, slot limits that prohibit fishing on all except a narrow range of fish sizes, and
220 s in environmental conditions and commercial fishing on annual adult survival and use two-sex matrix
221  policies less likely to mitigate impacts of fishing on habitats and ecosystems compared with the lab
222 h less healthy stocks and greater impacts of fishing on other species.
223 els evaluating the effects of size-selective fishing on these patterns had only small support.
224 ification and turnover in the composition of fishing opportunities increased economic stability durin
225 ls are required to travel further afield for fishing opportunities.
226 tions of "scorched earth" (i.e., severe over-fishing), optimized management, or an arbitrarily define
227 of cephalopod catch rates (catch per unit of fishing or sampling effort).
228 in-vitro selection technique (BLI-SELEX) for fishing out specific aptamers against E. coli Shiga toxi
229        But they show that climate can impact fishing outcomes in ways unaccounted by management and o
230 ent an EEZ-wide analysis of Palau commercial fishing over a 6-year period (2011-2016), and develop a
231   Other, more prolific species can withstand fishing over the long term if catches are subject to eff
232                                  The role of fishing patterns in explaining between-fisheries variati
233 system integrity and resilience from current fishing patterns than previously recognized.
234 idged by borrowing quota from the subsequent fishing period or transforming unutilized quota in other
235                              We project that fishing practices could be modified to increase total ca
236 degraded by coastal development, destructive fishing practices, and climate change.
237 roducts, drives unregulated and exploitative fishing practices, which are in turn facilitated by the
238 an disturbance and provide guidance for best fishing practices.
239 ecosystem more prone to coral collapse under fishing pressure but also more prone to recovery as fish
240  the response of the ecosystem to changes in fishing pressure depends not only on the magnitude of ch
241                            Water quality and fishing pressure had minimal effect on the unprecedented
242                                              Fishing pressure is disproportionately concentrated insi
243  but not causally correlated, revealing that fishing pressure is most intense in rivers where potenti
244 ensiveness of stock assessments, strength of fishing pressure limits, and comprehensiveness of enforc
245 ecruitment, but local changes in habitat and fishing pressure may have played a role in driving local
246                                              Fishing pressure on coral reef ecosystems has been frequ
247 re as a means to improve incomes and relieve fishing pressure on nearshore fish stocks.
248 ure climate change and sustainable levels of fishing pressure on selected target species.
249      Mapping and quantifying bottom trawling fishing pressure on the seafloor is pivotal to understan
250 hat have experienced substantial increase in fishing pressure over the past 60 y.
251 rature, oxygen, net primary production and a fishing pressure proxy, to which we apply the EOF and NA
252 hieve management objectives if used to limit fishing pressure rather than enhance fishing capacity.
253   Devil rays (Mobula spp.) face intensifying fishing pressure to meet the ongoing international deman
254 n and parrotfish, which escaped die-offs and fishing pressure, can achieve abundances comparable to t
255 this effect depended on local abundances and fishing pressure, with MPAs required to be 1.6-2.6 times
256 ch actions, recognizing the widely differing fishing pressures and conservation capacity.
257 ol skills by providing learners with termite fishing probes.
258                                              Fishing rates of a small-scale artisanal Mexican fishery
259                              Analysis of our fishing records and available literature, however, sugge
260 ne Protected Area along the Peninsula, a key fishing region, is driving the development of an adaptiv
261 ral capital, with and without enforcement of fishing regulations that prohibit the use of larger vess
262 nt to an average of USD 77 billion in annual fishing revenue.
263 rsification levels, trends, and variation in fishing revenues changed after implementation of catch s
264 ted whether diversification and variation in fishing revenues changed after implementation of catch s
265    More than 85% of communities show reduced fishing revenues following these regime shifts.
266 s a competitive race to fish that compresses fishing seasons, resulting in ecological damage, economi
267 ind strong evidence that catch shares extend fishing seasons.
268 direction and intervention for the artisanal fishing sector in these challenging times.
269 egional catch and revenue in the New England fishing sector, but also ultimately county-level wages a
270 text indicates that one of these sites was a fishing settlement for the procurement of local catches,
271 fter a US-Russia war under business-as-usual fishing-similar in magnitude to the end-of-century decli
272  agrarian (n=27), trading (n=9), or lakeside fishing sites (n=4).
273 t the paternal-effort hypothesis in the dark fishing spider, Dolomedes tenebrosus.
274 s that fishers have no viable alternative to fishing, such that total fishing effort remains constant
275                                       After "fishing" them from the blood, the cells, still bound to
276 uncements were to trigger similar preemptive fishing, this could temporarily increase the share of ov
277 Orcinus orca) interactions as proportions of fishing time (days) and fishing area (spatial cells).
278              For example, quickly increasing fishing to a given level can collapse an ecosystem that
279 ulations, from direct top-down management of fishing to indirect improvement of governance conditions
280 approach to compare the qualities of termite fishing tools used by wild chimpanzees by comparing the
281 tes of the intensity of ship activity across fishing, tourism and research sectors: there may be appr
282 shery, a fisherman's probability of taking a fishing trip in high wind conditions decreased by 82% co
283 vessel position records from 2494 commercial fishing trips along with corresponding revenues, here we
284 can be deployed to perform on-farm assays in fishing units.
285 , we describe an outbreak of SARS-CoV-2 on a fishing vessel associated with a high attack rate.
286 ustrial fisheries have expanded globally, as fishing vessels are required to travel further afield fo
287                                              Fishing vessels attracted more birds than other vessels,
288  estimation of the proportion of nondeclared fishing vessels operating in national and international
289  existed for remotely identifying individual fishing vessels potentially engaged in these abuses on a
290 lity due to lethal interactions with illegal fishing vessels.
291 -eight marine turtles were examined on-board fishing vessels.
292 ustrial longliner, squid jigger, and trawler fishing vessels.
293 domized 26 high-schistosomiasis-transmission fishing villages in Lake Victoria, Uganda, in a 1:1 rati
294 em, but there were negative perceptions when fishing was being prohibited.
295                          Previously, termite fishing was known from eight locations with two distingu
296 g a pull-down assay based on mixed disulfide fishing, we characterized the thiol-dependent interactom
297                           Analogous to trawl fishing, we introduced multiple Hg binding units (thymin
298               Our results support suspending fishing when prey biomass drops below critical threshold
299 electric eels (Electrophorus electricus) by "fishing with horses" [von Humboldt A (1807) Ann Phys 25:
300 tween 20 degrees S and 40 degrees S, and the fishing zone within international waters off Peru (20 de

 
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