List of contributors x
Foreword xiv
Preface xv
Acknowledgements xvi
Section 1: Freshwater fisheries ecology
1.1 Introduction 3
John F. Craig
Section 2: Freshwater ecosystems
2.1 Introduction 7
John F. Craig
2.2 The dynamics of rivers in relation to fishes and fisheries
9
Geoff Petts, Marie‐Pierre Gosselin and Janina Gray
2.3 The dynamics of lakes in relation to fishes and fisheries
31
Brian Moss
2.4 The physico‐chemical characteristics, biota and fisheries of
estuaries 48
Ian C. Potter, Richard M. Warwick, Norm G. Hall and James R.
Tweedley
Section 3: Freshwater resources
3.1 Introduction 83
John F. Craig
3.2 Northern North America 85
Wiliam Tonn, Heidi Swanson, Cynthia Paszkowski, Justin Hanisch and
Louise Chavarie
3.3 Fennoscandian freshwater fishes: diversity, use, threats and
management 101
Bror Jonsson and Nina Jonsson
3.4 Fishery and freshwater ecosystems of Russia: status, trends,
research, management and priorities, 120
Yury Yu. Dgebuadze
3.5 Fishery of the Laurentian Great Lakes 134
Thomas E. Lauer
3.6 Canadian freshwater fishes, fisheries and their management,
south of 60°N 151
John R. Post, Nicholas Mandrak and Mary Burridge
3.7 Freshwater fisheries of the United States 166
Thomas E. Lauer and Mark Pyron
3.8 Fisheries in the densely populated landscapes of Western
Europe 181
Ian J. Winfield and Daniel Gerdeaux
3.9 Freshwater resources and fisheries in Slovakia 191
Andrea Novomeská and Vladimír Kováč
3.10 Freshwater resources and fisheries in Hungary 196
András Specziár and Tibor Erős
3.11 Freshwater resources and fisheries in the Czech Republic
201
Pavel Horký
3.12 Problems and challenges of fish stock management in fresh
waters of Poland 208
Zbigniew Kaczkowski and Joanna Grabowska
3.13 Nature and status of freshwater fisheries in Belarus
216
Vitaliy Semenchenko, Victor Rizevski and Inna Ermolaeva
3.14 Current state of freshwater fisheries in China 221
Yahui Zhao, Rodolphe Elie Gozlan and Chunguang Zhang
3.15 Japanese inland fisheries and aquaculture: status and
trends 231
Osamu Katano, Hiroshi Hakoyama and Shin‐ichiro S. Matsuzaki
3.16 Fisheries in subtropical and temperate regions of Africa
241
Olaf L. F. Weyl and Paul D. Cowley
3.17 Freshwater fisheries resources in subtropical America
256
Rafael Miranda
3.18 Iberian inland fisheries 268
Carlos Antunes, Fernando Cobo and Mário Jorge Araújo
3.19 Nature and status of freshwater and estuarine fisheries in
Italy and Western Balkans 283
Pier Giorgio Bianco and Valerio Ketmaier
3.20 Fisheries ecology of Greece 292
Ioannis D. Leonardos
3.21 The ecology of inland fisheries of Turkey 304
Sedat V. Yerli
3.22 Fisheries ecology in South American river basins, 311
Mário Barletta, Victor E. Cussac, Angelo A. Agostinho, Claudio
Baigún, Edson K. Okada, Agostinho Carlos Catella, Nelson F.
Fontoura, Paulo S. Pompeu, Luz F. Jiménez‐Segura, Vandick S.
Batista, Carlos A. Lasso, Donald Taphorn and Nídia N. Fabré
3.23 Inland fisheries of tropical Africa 349
Brian E. Marshall
3.24 Fisheries of the rivers of Southeast Asia 363
Robin L. Welcomme, Ian G. Baird, David Dudgeon, Ashley Halls, Dirk
Lamberts and Md Golam Mustafa
3.25 Asian upland fishes and fisheries 377
A. Ian Payne
3.26 Fishes and fisheries of Asian inland lacustrine waters
384
Upali S. Amarasinghe and Sena S. De Silva
3.27 Freshwater fisheries of Australasia 404
Donald J. Jellyman, Peter C. Gehrke and John H. Harris
Section 4: Fishing operations
4.1 Introduction 421
John F. Craig
4.2 Aboriginal freshwater fisheries as resilient
social–ecological systems 422
Mimi E. Lam
4.3 Commercial inland capture fisheries, 438
Devin M. Bartley, Gertjan de Graaf and John Valbo‐Jørgensen
4.4 Recreational fisheries in inland waters 449
Steven J. Cooke, Robert Arlinghaus, Brett M. Johnson and Ian G.
Cowx
Section 5: Fisheries management
5.1 Fisheries governance and management 469
Robin L. Welcomme
5.2 Assessment and modelling in freshwater fisheries 483
Tony J. Pitcher
5.3 Social benefits from inland fisheries: implications for a
people‐centred response to management and governance challenges
500
Robert Arthur, Richard Friend and Christophe Béné
5.4 A human rights‐based approach to securing livelihoods
depending on inland fisheries 513
Nicole Franz, Carlos Fuentevilla, Lena Westlund and Rolf
Willmann
5.5 The optimal fishing pattern 524
Jeppe Kolding, Richard Law, Michael Plank and Paul A. M. van
Zwieten
Section 6: Fisheries development
6.1 Introduction 543
John F. Craig
6.2 Environmental assessment for fisheries 544
Nigel Milner
6.3 Management of freshwater fisheries: addressing habitat,
people and fishes 557
Robert Arlinghaus, Kai Lorenzen, Brett M. Johnson, Steven J. Cooke
and Ian G. Cowx
6.4 Aquaculture 580
Randall E. Brummett and Malcolm C. M. Beveridge
6.5 Ecological implications of genetically modified fishes in
freshwater fisheries, with a focus on salmonids 594
L. Fredrik Sundström and Robert H. Devlin
6.6 Sustainable freshwater fisheries: the search for workable
solutions 616
Rodolphe Elie Gozlan and John Robert Britton
Section 7: The effects of perturbations on fisheries
7.1 Introduction 625
John F. Craig
7.2 Harvest‐induced phenotypic change in inland fisheries
626
Lauren J. Chapman and Diana M. T. Sharpe
7.3 Climate change and freshwater fisheries 641
Chris Harrod
7.4 Toxicology 695
Nic Bury
7.5 Impoundments, barriers and abstractions: impact on fishes
and fisheries, mitigation and future directions 717
Paul S. Kemp
7.6 Role and impact of non‐native species on inland fisheries:
the Janus syndrome 770
Rodolphe Elie Gozlan
7.7 Eutrophication and freshwater fisheries 779
Ian J. Winfield
7.8 Aquaculture and the environment 794
Malcolm C. M. Beveridge and Randall E. Brummett
Section 8: Tools and future developments in freshwater fisheries
8.1 Introduction 807
John F. Craig
8.2 A list of suggested research areas in freshwater fisheries
ecology 808
John F. Craig
8.3 Molecular ecology and stock identification 811
Eleanor A. S. Adamson and David A. Hurwood
8.4 Recruitment 830
Thomas A. Johnston, Nigel P. Lester and Brian J. Shuter,
Countries index 846
Fish index 848
Author index 860
Subject index 884
About the Editor
John Craig is Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Fish Biology
and has an enormous range of expertise and a wealth of knowledge of
freshwater fishes and their ecology, having studied them around the
globe, including in Asia, North America, Africa, the Middle East
and Europe. His particular interests have been in population
dynamics and life history strategies. He is a Fellow of the Linnean
Society of London and the Society of Biology.
"As a former publisher, I feel able to suggest thatthose who write
the blurbs that appear on book covers
are sometimes prone to hyperbole when they claim that the content
therein represents a ‘landmark publication’, worth every penny of
the eighty quid they want you to part with to own a printed copy.
But as a thwarted fisheries ecologist, I’d happily agree with
whoever made that claim for this book, and not just because at 900
pages and 2.7kg it fits both possible definitions of the term
landmark, being simultaneously ‘an object recognizable from a
distance’ as well as ‘an event marking a stage or important turning
point’.
Trying to provide a comprehensive account of inland fisheries
worldwide is a daunting task, one that could not sensibly be
tackled by a single author, or even a small group. You need a big
international team, recruited and guided by someone with experience
of fisheries in different climates and cultures, able to identify
and bring together a diverse collection of authors, capable of
encouraging them to write contributions to meet a common aim rather
than to their own agenda, and someone with the ability to edit many
contributions into a coherent whole. Persuading John Craig to take
on the role was a masterstroke; the longserving editor of the
Journal of Fish Biology has the perfect meld of research
experience, editorial expertise and familiarity with the writing
skills of the population of fisheries scientists. The result is a
book drawing together the expertise of over 100 high-calibre
contributors that works as a coherent whole, and as a resource
likely to stand the test of time. Contributions of varying length
are grouped together in eight sections, on topics such as the
basics of freshwater ecosystems; freshwater resources of fisheries
by geographical region; fishing operations; fishery management;
fisheries development; the effects of perturbations; and a final
section on future developments.
No volume of this type is ever going to be perfect and there are
doubtless a few gaps and inconsistencies in the coverage. But the
flaws are utterly trivial compared to the strengths, and if I were
still an aspiring young fish biologist, or an academic freshwater
biologist, a fisheries manager or consultant, I wouldn’t hesitate
to buy my own copy. I know, I know, eighty pounds for a book makes
the eyes water, but you can get a guided tour of the whole world of
fisheries ecology for trivially more than the cost of renewing a UK
passport. The book will last you at least as long and make much
more interesting reading". (BES Bulletin Vol 48:3 September 2017)
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