Gray Thomas N E, Phommachak Amphone, Vannachomchan Kongseng, Guegan Francois
WWF Greater Mekong, 21, Boeun Keng Kang 1, Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
WWF-Laos, Unit 05, Saylom Village, Vientiane, Lao Democratic People's Republic.
PLoS One. 2017 Aug 18;12(8):e0183247. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0183247. eCollection 2017.
Pressures on freshwater biodiversity in Southeast Asia are accelerating yet the status and conservation needs of many of the region's threatened fish species are unclear. This impacts the ability to implement conservation activities and to understand the effects of infrastructure developments and other hydrological changes. We used Local Ecological Knowledge from fishing communities on the Mekong River in the Siphandone waterscape, Lao PDR to estimate mean and mode last capture dates of eight rare or culturally significant fish species in order to provide conservation monitoring baselines. One hundred and twenty fishermen, from six villages, were interviewed. All eight species had been captured, by at least one of the interviewees, within the waterscape within the past year. However the mean and mode last capture dates varied between the species. Larger species, and those with higher Red List threat status, were caught less recently than smaller species of less conservation concern. The status of the Critically Endangered Pangasius sanitwongsei (mean last capture date 116.4 months) is particularly worrying suggesting severe population decline although cultural issues may have caused this species to have been under-reported. This highlights that studies making use of Local Ecological Knowledge need to understand the cultural background and context from which data is collected. Nevertheless we recommend our approach, of stratified random interviews to establish mean last capture dates, may be an effective methodology for monitoring freshwater fish species of conservation concern within artisanal fisheries. If fishing effort remains relatively constant, or if changes in fishing effort are accounted for, differences over time in mean last capture dates are likely to represent changes in the status of species. We plan to repeat our interview surveys within the waterscape as part of a long-term fish-monitoring program.
东南亚淡水生物多样性面临的压力正在加速,但该地区许多濒危鱼类物种的现状和保护需求尚不清楚。这影响了开展保护活动以及了解基础设施发展和其他水文变化影响的能力。我们利用老挝人民民主共和国四番东流域湄公河渔业社区的地方生态知识,估算了8种珍稀或具有文化意义鱼类的平均和众数最后捕获日期,以便提供保护监测基线。我们采访了来自6个村庄的120名渔民。在过去一年里,所有8个物种都至少被一名受访者在该流域捕获过。然而,不同物种的平均和众数最后捕获日期各不相同。体型较大的物种以及在《濒危物种红色名录》中受威胁程度较高的物种,与保护关注度较低的较小物种相比,最近被捕获的次数较少。极度濒危的桑氏魾(平均最后捕获日期为116.4个月)的现状尤其令人担忧,这表明其种群数量严重下降,尽管文化因素可能导致该物种的报告不足。这突出表明,利用地方生态知识进行的研究需要了解收集数据的文化背景和情境。尽管如此,我们建议,通过分层随机访谈来确定平均最后捕获日期的方法,可能是监测个体渔业中受保护淡水鱼类物种的有效方法。如果捕捞努力保持相对稳定,或者考虑到捕捞努力的变化,平均最后捕获日期随时间的差异可能代表物种状况的变化。我们计划在该流域重复进行访谈调查,作为长期鱼类监测计划的一部分。