Preventing the collapse of a resource that remains an essential part of food security and is vital to communities and livelihoods across the Southeast Asian region
To support the restoration of fisheries resources and improve the habitat linkage, six countries of the South China Sea and the Gulf of Thailand LME have been working together since 2017 in the project “Establishment and Operation of a Regional Fisheries Refugia in the South China Sea and the Gulf of Thailand” (SCS Fisheries Refugia) financed by the Global Environment Facility, implemented by the United Nations Environment Programme and executed by Southeast Asia Fisheries Development Center (SEAFDEC).
Aiming towards an ecosystem-based approach to managing the transboundary fish stock in the Gulf of Thailand LME and the South China Sea, the project promotes the sustainable fisheries of short mackerel by safeguarding brood-stocks and early life history stages of the short mackerel in the region. The practical approach to the sustainable utilization of fisheries resources is to integrate both scientific knowledge and local information, and layer these with the baseline information as well as climate change impacts that affect the short mackerel resources.
To manage short mackerel stock in the Gulf of Thailand, three countries, namely Thailand, Cambodia, and Viet Nam, are working jointly in implementing and establishing and implementing a regional system of short mackerel fisheries refugia. This will help address the need share data on local stock assessment and transboundary management mechanism, among others. In Cambodia, the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry, and Fisheries (MAFF) adopted the Proclamation of the Establishment of Management Area of Short Mackerel Fisheries Refugia in 2019 which covers a total area of 1,283ha in Peam Krasob commune and Koh Kapi commune in Koh Kong province. In Thailand, the proposed management area for short mackerel fisheries refugia is in the final process of stakeholder consultation. The Department of Fisheries of Thailand proposed to establish a fisheries refugia site covering an area of 140,000ha in the Trat Province. Concurrently, Viet Nam is holding stakeholder consultations as part of its baseline survey.