partially in the high seas. The United Nations
Fish Stocks Agreement (in force since 2001)
should be used as the legal basis for management
measures of the high seas fisheries.
Regarding the Sustainable Development Goals
(SDGs), the situation as at 2017 indicates that it is
unlikely that SDG Target 14.4 (to end overfishing
of marine fisheries by 2020) will be achieved.
Achieving the target will require time and:
stronger political will, especially at the
national level;
enhanced institutional and governance
capacity, technology transfer and
capacity building in science-based best
management practices;
controlling of fishing capacity and intensity at
levels that do not impair resource productivity;
transformation of consumers’ perceptions
through market mechanisms and education;
strengthening of the global monitoring system
to provide transparent and timely information
to the public.
The continuous increase in the percentage of
stocks fished at biologically unsustainable levels
may mask regional differences in progress.
In general, intensively managed fisheries have
seen decreases in average fishing pressure and
increases in stock biomass, with some reaching
biologically sustainable levels, while fisheries
with less-developed management are in poor
shape (
Box 4
). This uneven progress highlights an
urgent need to replicate and re-adapt successful
policies and measures in the light of the realities
of specific fisheries, and to focus on creating
mechanisms that can effectively implement
policy and regulations in fisheries with
little management.
Inland fisheries
Basins that support inland capture fisheries can
be found throughout the world. In some cases,
these are major sources of inland fish as food
in national or regional diets (e.g. the African
Great Lakes, the Lower Mekong Basin, the
Peruvian and Brazilian Amazon, and the
Brahmaputra and Ayeyarwady river basins).
Elsewhere, their production may be modest
but of strong local-importance in the diet (e.g.
interior regions of Sri Lanka, and Sumatra and
Kalimantan in Indonesia). Allocating national
inland fishery catch data by basin, sub-basin and
large waterbody provides a more realistic picture
of the areas where inland fisheries are conducted
(
Figure 22
).
Table 14
shows the 60 most important hydrological
or river basins in terms of contribution to the
global inland fish catch. The first 50 percent of
total global inland fish catch can be attributed
to the top 7 basins. These basins also represent
some of the highest levels of per capita fish
consumption in the world.
Some of the world’s largest inland fisheries come
from basins or river systems that are facing
severe threats from anthropogenic and natural
environmental pressures. However, there is
limited or no routine monitoring of the status
of capture fisheries in most of these basins
(see the section Improving the assessment of
global inland fisheries, p. 179). Inland fisheries
are strongly influenced by fluctuations in
environmental and climate conditions, in
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