Browsing by Author "Kindinda, Kassim"
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item To connect or not to connect? Floods, fisheries andlivelihoods in the Lower Rufiji floodplain lakes,Tanzania(http://www.tandfonline.com/, 2011-12-16) Hamerlynck, Olivier; Duvail, Stéphanie; Vandepitte, Leen; Kindinda, Kassim; Nyingi, Dorothy W.; Paul, Jean-Luc; Yanda, Pius Z.; Mwakalinga, Aggrey B.; Mgaya, Yunus D.; Snoeks, JoeFor seven years, village-based recorders monitored fish catches and water levels in seven floodplain-associated lakes of the Lower Rufiji, Tanzania. The lakes differ in the number of days and volume of inflows fromthe river, and thus provide a natural experiment to explore the links between catch composition, income per hour offishing (IPHF) and hydrological connectivity, and to analyse the response of the users. The fishers adapt their fish-ing mode and equipment to achieve a rather constant IPHF of between 0.2 and 0.8 US$/fisher/hour. In situationsof low connectivity, during a series of drought years, the less well-connected lakes lost many species and became avirtual monoculture ofOreochromis urolepis.Only in one extreme case was average fish size significantly reduced,indicating a high fishing pressure. Catch was therefore highly resilient to shifts toward illegal, non-selective andactive fishing techniques. Fish diversity and lake productivity were quickly re-established when the larger lakesreconnected. The potential impacts of changes in the flood hydrograph (through dams, increased abstraction orclimate/land-use changes) are assessed, and management options discussed.