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Single-Species Co-management Improves Fish Assemblage Structure and Composition in a Tropical River
2021
Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution
Co-management is increasingly recognized as an effective model for managing fisheries, but little information exists on whether co-management can produce effects in species other than the target species. Fishery co-management in the tropics, where fish diversity is high and fish catches tend to be multispecies, is prone to produce assemblage-wide effects via alterations in the food web and changes in the overall capture of non-target species. Here, we assessed the effects of co-management for
doi:10.3389/fevo.2021.604170
doaj:8f369d913cb2495e8820b278c4912392
fatcat:7puroate4vetll73wda5vwh5ba