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Southern Cross UniversityePublications@SCU
Theses
2009
Managing for sustainability : the live reef food-fishtrade in Solomon IslandsRyan DonnellySouthern Cross University
ePublications@SCU is an electronic repository administered by Southern Cross University Library. Its goal is to capture and preserve the intellectualoutput of Southern Cross University authors and researchers, and to increase visibility and impact through open access to researchers around theworld. For further information please contact [email protected].
Publication detailsDonnelly, R 2009, 'Managing for sustainability : the live reef food-fish trade in Solomon Islands', MSc thesis, Southern CrossUniversity, Lismore, NSW.Copyright R Donnelly 2009
Managing for Sustainability: the Live Reef
Food-Fish Trade in Solomon Islands
Ryan Donnelly B.App.Sci (Hons)
Graduate Research College
Southern Cross University, Lismore NSW
Thesis submitted for the Degree of Master of Science (Research)
12 July 2009
ii
Statement of Sources
I certify that the work presented in this thesis is, to the best of my knowledge and belief,
original, except as acknowledged in the text, and that the material has not been submitted,
either in whole or in part, for a degree at this or any other university.
I acknowledge that I have read and understood the University's rules, requirements,
procedures and policy relating to my higher degree research award and to my thesis. I certify
that I have complied with the rules, requirements, procedures and policy of the University (as
they may be from time to time).
Ryan Donnelly
12 July 2009
Acknowledgements
I would like to acknowledge the co-operation of all the villagers in the three areas visited for
their patience and good humour in the conduct of this research. Visits to the regions were
characterised by good will and warm hospitality. Gregory Bennett did an excellent job of
conducting the bulk of the survey. He went about the task with a typically positive outlook.
Nelson Kilé stood in for Gregory for the Ontong Java leg of the research. We shared many
enjoyable hours exchanging stories and laughing. Prior to the Ontong Java survey, I enjoyed
the hospitality of Nelson and Michelle Lam at their home in Honiara. I would like to thank
them both for making me welcome. In Australia, Lyle Squire Snr provided invaluable advice
and friendship, Derrin Davis showed me a lot of faith, Katrina Luckie was terrific with her
data analysis, and Peter Harrison was positive and prompt with his editing and feedback.
Thankyou.
iii
Abstract
This thesis presents the results of a project funded by the Australian Centre for International
Agricultural Research, which was devised in response to claims from the Solomon Islands
government that the Live Reef Food-Fish Trade (LRFFT) in that country was conducted in a
manner considered highly unsustainable. The project sought to establish a plan of
management that would enable the fishery to be conducted on a sustainable basis. The
population in Solomon Islands is overwhelmingly rural with largely subsistence economies at
the village level. However, urban migration and cash dependence are growing phenomena.
Unsustainable conduct of the LRFFT was considered a threat to the social and cultural fabric
of the majority of the population, one that threatened food security and, in light of high
population growth, the tenability of village life.
The aim of the thesis is to assemble the information necessary to establish management of the
LRFFT in Solomon Islands on a sustainable basis. The primary focus entailed a socio-
economic evaluation of village life prior to, and in the presence of, a live fishery in order to
gauge the impact of the live fish trade. It also examined the biological and ecological
consequences of the adopted fishing practice; and the legislative and customary frameworks
upon which the trade might be managed in a sustainable manner.
Interactions between fisheries development, coral reef ecosystems and demography determine
that the study of fishing, especially subsistence fishing, requires the integration of research on
the ecology of the reefs and their resources with research on coastal economies and societies.
This has consequences for development and management programs and the evaluation of their
impact on village communities. The demographic and food issues associated with fishing are
at the focal point of fisheries dynamics. Consequently, this thesis examines the various
components of the LRFFT and focuses on the social dynamics and development opportunities
in Solomon Islands.
The study found that the rate of participation, and the fishing effort exerted, in the LRFFT
differed in each of the three regions within Solomon Islands that hosted the trade. The
difference was related to proximity to markets and alternative sources of income. The
common aspect among these regions was that participation accompanied intensive fishing in
seasonal and highly predictable spawning aggregations of the targeted species. Such fishing
practice elsewhere has led to the collapse of fish aggregations and subsequent failure to
reform. These species do not feature as a staple in the diet of villagers but do form a
iv
component. Fishers were paid marginally more for live fish than they received periodically
for dead fish. During the three-month spawning period, villagers earned an apparently large
amount, yet over the duration of one year, the returns were unremarkable. The disturbance to
village life during this fishing period, the threat to future food security and the ecological
consequences of the mass removal of top end reef predators, however, are the important
consequences of the LRFFT conducted in a previously unregulated manner.
Observance of the Customary Marine Tenure system in Solomon Islands is strong. There is a
strict hierarchical decision-making structure within the villages and clan groups. Defence of
fishing access entitlements for a commercial purpose is vigilant and Custom Law is exercised
for all but the most serious breaches. The government Fisheries Division is poorly resourced
and, consequently, has a limited enforcement capacity. The scope for community-based co-
management is very good. Solomon Islands has modern Fisheries legislation that emphasises
sustainable utilisation of marine resources. In accordance with this legislation, this project
devised a plan of management that places customary reef owners central to the issue of
LRFFT licenses and the conditions outlined therein. Intending operators must meet the
conditions of a three-tiered approval process. Overriding all negotiated conditions is that
fishing is prohibited in areas that are declared fish aggregation sites for three ten-day
spawning periods per year, as is the export of Napoleon Wrasse.
Fisheries Officers were trained in aspects of live fish husbandry in a format designed for
community extension. A stock monitoring program has been established, using Underwater
Visual Census, which will form the basis of feedback between reef owners and Fisheries
Officers, thereby cultivating an advocative relationship.
v
Table of Contents
Statement of Sources ______________________________________________________ ii
Acknowledgements _______________________________________________________ ii
Abstract_________________________________________________________________iii
Chapter 1: The Live Reef Food-Fish Trade_____________________________________ 1
1.1 Introduction __________________________________________________________ 1
1.2 History and Development of the LRFFT ____________________________________ 2
1.3 Exporting Countries ____________________________________________________ 4
1.3.1 Indonesia and Philippines ____________________________________________ 4
1.3.2 Pacific Region _____________________________________________________ 6
1.3.3 Other Source Countries ______________________________________________ 7
1.3.4 Aquaculture/Mariculture _____________________________________________ 8
1.4 Scope of the Study _____________________________________________________ 9
1.5 Aims and Objectives___________________________________________________ 10
Chapter 2: Sustainability and the LRFFT_____________________________________ 12
2.1 The Concept of Sustainability ___________________________________________ 12
2.1.1 Institutional Role in Achieving Sustainability ___________________________ 12
2.2 Sustainability Issues in the LRFFT _______________________________________ 16
2.2.1 Habitat Degradation from Sodium Cyanide Use__________________________ 17
2.2.2 The Cycle of Debt _________________________________________________ 19
2.2.3 Poorly Defined Property Rights ______________________________________ 20
2.2.4 Economic Impacts of Reef Habitat Destruction __________________________ 21
2.2.5 Ciguatera Poisoning________________________________________________ 21
2.3 Intensive Fishing in Spawning Aggregations________________________________ 22
2.3.1 Spawning Behaviour of Reef Fish_____________________________________ 23
2.3.2 The Impacts of Fishing Spawning Aggregations _________________________ 26
2.3.3 Biological Consequences of Fishing Spawning Aggregations _______________ 27
Chapter 3: The LRFFT in Solomon Islands ___________________________________ 30
3.1 Solomon Islands Background____________________________________________ 30
3.1.1 People __________________________________________________________ 30
3.1.2 Settlement Pattern _________________________________________________ 31
3.1.3 Economy ________________________________________________________ 32
3.1.4 Contemporary Political Climate ______________________________________ 33
3.1.5 Population Pressure ________________________________________________ 33
3.1.6 Population Dynamics_______________________________________________ 34
3.1.7 Urban Migration __________________________________________________ 35
vi
3.1.8 Religion _________________________________________________________ 35
3.1.9 Fishing Activity___________________________________________________ 36
3.2 Development of the LRFFT in Solomon Islands _____________________________ 38
3.2.1 Origins __________________________________________________________ 38
3.2.2 Dynamics of the LRFFT in Solomon Islands ____________________________ 39
3.2.3 Moratorium ______________________________________________________ 41
3.2.4 Management Impediments __________________________________________ 42
3.2.5 License Application Procedure _______________________________________ 43
3.2.6 Status of the LRFFT as at the end of 2001 ______________________________ 43
3.2.7 Status of Spawning Aggregations: Marovo Lagoon _______________________ 44
Chapter 4: Fisheries Management Framework in Solomon Islands ________________ 47
4.1 Legal Framework for the Management of the LRFFT_________________________ 49
4.1.1 International Conventions and Instruments______________________________ 49
4.1.2 National Framework for the Management of the LRFFT ___________________ 51
4.1.3 The Fisheries Act 1998 _____________________________________________ 51
4.2 Administrative Framework______________________________________________ 54
4.2.1 Fisheries Division _________________________________________________ 54
4.3 Customary Resource Management in Solomon Islands________________________ 56
4.3.1 Customary Marine Tenure System ____________________________________ 56
4.3.2 Village Decision-Making Systems ____________________________________ 57
4.3.3 Effectiveness of Customary Fisheries Management _______________________ 61
4.3.4 Integration with Centralised Management ______________________________ 61
4.4 Community-based Co-management _______________________________________ 62
4.4.1 Successes and Failures _____________________________________________ 64
Chapter 5: Socio-economics and the Impact of the LRFFT in Solomon Islands ______ 67
5.1 Introduction _________________________________________________________ 67
5.2 Scope and Limitations of this Study_______________________________________ 67
5.3 Components of the Survey ______________________________________________ 68
5.3.1 Activities of the household __________________________________________ 68
5.3.2 Fishing Effort_____________________________________________________ 68
5.3.3 Catch of LRFFT Target Species ______________________________________ 69
5.3.4 Patterns of Consumption of LRFFT Species_____________________________ 69
5.3.5 Income and Expenditure ____________________________________________ 69
5.3.6 Perceptions of Importance___________________________________________ 69
5.4 Methods ____________________________________________________________ 69
5.4.1 Survey Implementation and Analysis __________________________________ 69
5.5 Inter-regional Results __________________________________________________ 70
vii
5.5.1 Sample Description ________________________________________________ 70
5.5.2 Activities of the Household__________________________________________ 72
5.5.3 Fishing Effort_____________________________________________________ 75
5.5.4 Fishing Catch_____________________________________________________ 77
5.5.5 Frequency of Consumption of LRFFT Target Species _____________________ 79
5.5.6 Income and Expenditure ____________________________________________ 82
5.5.7 Perceptions of Importance___________________________________________ 87
5.6 Discussion of Inter regional Results_______________________________________ 90
5.6.1 Impact of the LRFFT on Village Households ____________________________ 91
5.6.2 Chilled Fishery ___________________________________________________ 92
5.6.3 Significance of the LRFFT Target Species ______________________________ 93
5.6.4 Income Earning Opportunities and the Cost of Living _____________________ 94
5.6.5 The Grouper Resource and its Management _____________________________ 97
Chapter 6: Socio-economics and the Impact of the LRFFT in Marovo Lagoon _____ 100
6.1 Introduction ________________________________________________________ 100
6.2 Results ____________________________________________________________ 102
6.2.1 Sample Description _______________________________________________ 102
6.2.2 Activities of the Household_________________________________________ 104
6.2.3 Fishing Effort____________________________________________________ 107
6.2.4 Fishing Catch____________________________________________________ 108
6.2.5 Frequency of Consumption of LRFFT Species__________________________ 109
6.2.6 Income and Expenditure ___________________________________________ 112
6.2.7 Perceptions of Importance__________________________________________ 116
6.3 Discussion__________________________________________________________ 119
6.3.1 Perceived Necessity for the LRFFT in Marovo Lagoon ___________________ 119
6.3.2 Impact of the LRFFT on Village Households in Marovo Lagoon ___________ 120
6.3.3 Chilled Fishery in Marovo Lagoon ___________________________________ 121
6.3.4 Significance of the LRFFT Target Species in Marovo Lagoon _____________ 122
6.3.5 Income Opportunities and the Cost of Living in Marovo Lagoon ___________ 124
6.3.6 The Grouper Resource and its Management in Marovo Lagoon ____________ 126
Chapter 7: Socio-economics and the Impact of the LRFFT in Roviana Lagoon _____ 128
7.1 Introduction ________________________________________________________ 128
7.2 Results ____________________________________________________________ 130
7.2.1 Sample Description _______________________________________________ 130
7.2.2 Activities of the Household_________________________________________ 131
7.2.3 Fishing Effort____________________________________________________ 133
7.2.4 Fishing Catch____________________________________________________ 134
viii
7.2.5 Frequency of Consumption of LRFFT Species__________________________ 135
7.2.6 Income and Expenditure ___________________________________________ 138
7.2.7 Perceptions of Importance__________________________________________ 141
7.3 Discussion__________________________________________________________ 142
7.3.1 Perceived Necessity for the LRFFT in Roviana Lagoon___________________ 142
7.3.2 Impact of the LRFFT on Village Households in Roviana Lagoon ___________ 143
7.3.3 Chilled Fishery in Roviana Lagoon___________________________________ 144
7.3.4 Significance of the LRFFT Target Species in Roviana Lagoon _____________ 145
7.3.5 Income Opportunities and the Cost of Living in Roviana Lagoon ___________ 147
7.3.6 The Grouper Resource and its Management in Roviana Lagoon ____________ 148
Chapter 8: Socio-economics and the Impact of the LRFFT in Ontong Java ________ 150
8.1 Introduction ________________________________________________________ 150
8.2 Results ____________________________________________________________ 152
8.2.1 Sample Description _______________________________________________ 152
8.2.2 Activities of the Household_________________________________________ 153
8.2.3 Fishing Effort____________________________________________________ 154
8.2.4 Fishing Catch____________________________________________________ 155
8.2.5 Frequency of Consumption of LRFFT Species__________________________ 156
8.2.6 Income and Expenditure ___________________________________________ 158
8.2.7 Perceptions of Importance__________________________________________ 161
8.3 Discussion__________________________________________________________ 164
8.3.1 Perceived Necessity for the LRFFT in Ontong Java______________________ 164
8.3.2 Impact of the LRFFT on Village Households in Ontong Java ______________ 165
8.3.3 Significance of the LRFFT Target Species in Ontong Java ________________ 166
8.3.4 Income Opportunities and the Cost of Living in Ontong Java ______________ 167
8.3.5 The Grouper Resource and its Management in Ontong Java _______________ 168
Chapter 9: Conclusions and Recommendations _______________________________ 170
9.1 Conclusions ________________________________________________________ 170
9.2 Formulation of a Plan of Management____________________________________ 172
9.3 Management Strategies________________________________________________ 172
9.4 Incorporating International Standards for the LRFFT ________________________ 174
9.4.1 Destructive fishing________________________________________________ 175
9.4.2 Target stock _____________________________________________________ 175
9.4.3 Food safety _____________________________________________________ 175
9.4.4 Transshipment ___________________________________________________ 175
9.5 Process of License Issue_______________________________________________ 175
9.6 Precautionary Approaches to Fisheries Management ________________________ 176
ix
9.7 Management and Development Strategies _________________________________ 176
9.7.1 Control of Fishing Effort ___________________________________________ 177
9.7.2 Reef Owner Agreements ___________________________________________ 177
9.7.3 Monitoring and Compliance ________________________________________ 177
9.8 Management Measures________________________________________________ 177
9.8.1 Reef Owner Agreements ___________________________________________ 177
9.8.2 Licensing _______________________________________________________ 179
9.8.3 Species Restrictions_______________________________________________ 179
9.8.4 Closed Season ___________________________________________________ 180
9.8.5 Closed Area _____________________________________________________ 180
9.8.6 Gear Restrictions _________________________________________________ 180
9.8.7 Foreign Vessel Requirements _______________________________________ 180
9.8.8 Responsible Fishing Practises _______________________________________ 181
9.8.9 By-catch________________________________________________________ 181
9.8.10 Training _______________________________________________________ 181
9.8.11 Restrictions of Fishers ____________________________________________ 181
9.9 Monitoring _________________________________________________________ 181
9.10 Amendments_______________________________________________________ 183
References ____________________________________________________________ 184
Appendix 1: Village Household Questionnaire ________________________________ 200
Appendix 2: Pilot Survey Notes_____________________________________________ 203
x
List of Tables
Table 2.1. The main effects of fishing spawning aggregations on the targeted species. ......... 27
Table 2.2. The main outcomes of fishing spawning aggregations on the targeted species. .... 28
Table 3.1. Population by province from 1970 to 1999. ......................................................... 34
Table 3.2. Total LRFFT export in 1997................................................................................ 39
Table 3.3. Live fish purchased by Ika Holdings in the Solomon Islands, 1996 - 1998. .......... 40
Table 3.4. Counts from first UVC assessment, conducted on the new moon. ........................ 45
Table 3.5. Counts from second UVC assessment, conducted on the full moon...................... 45
Table 4.1. International conventions and instruments that apply to LRFFT management. ..... 49
Table 4.2. National framework for the conservation and management of the LRFFT............ 51
Table 4.3. Components of the Fisheries Act 1998 that are relevant to the management of the LRFFT . .............................................................................................................. 52
Table 4.4. Structure and responsibilities of the Solomon Islands Fisheries Division. ............ 55
Table 5.1. Characteristics of the sample in the three study areas. .......................................... 71
Table 5.2. Comparison of fishing effort in 1999 and during the LRFFT. .............................. 75
Table 5.3. Fishing effort in the fishery that ships chilled fish in eskies to Honiara. ............... 76
Table 5.4. Comparison of total catch, and the component of which were groupers, between fishing activity in 1999 and during the LRFFT. ................................................... 78
Table 5.5. Total catch and proportion of the catch comprising groupers in the chilled fishery............................................................................................................................. 78
Table 5.6. Average income by source for the three regions that hosted the LRFFT............... 84
Table 5.7. Average expenditure by source for the three regions that hosted the LRFFT. ....... 87
Table 6.1. Participating villages and their religious affiliations........................................... 102
Table 6.2. Characteristics of the sample in Marovo Lagoon................................................ 103
Table 6.3. Comparison of fishing effort in 1999 and during the LRFFT in Marovo Lagoon........................................................................................................................... 107
Table 6.4. Fishing effort in the “Eskies” fishery from Marovo Lagoon to Honiara.............. 108
Table 6.5. Comparison of total catch, and the component of which were groupers, between fishing activity in 1999 and during the LRFFT in Marovo Lagoon..................... 109
Table 6.6. Total catch and grouper component in the “Eskies” fishery in Marovo Lagoon.. 109
Table 6.7. Average income by source for respondents from Marovo Lagoon...................... 114
Table 6.8. Average expenditure by source for respondents from Marovo Lagoon............... 116
Table 7.1. Participating Roviana villages. .......................................................................... 129
Table 7.3. Comparison of fishing effort in 1999 and during the LRFFT in Roviana Lagoon........................................................................................................................... 133
Table 7.4. Fishing effort in the “Eskies” fishery from Roviana Lagoon to Honiara. ............ 133
Table 7.5. Comparison of total catch, and the component of which were groupers, between fishing activity in 1999 and during the LRFFT in Roviana Lagoon. ................... 134
xi
Table 7.6. Total catch and grouper component in the “Eskies” fishery in Roviana Lagoon. 135
Table 7.7. Average income by source for respondents from Roviana Lagoon. .................... 139
Table 7.8. Average expenditure by source for respondents from Roviana Lagoon. ............. 140
Table 8.1. Participating villages and their community affiliations....................................... 151
Table 8.2. Characteristics of the sample in Ontong Java. .................................................... 153
Table 8.3. Comparison of fishing effort in 1999 and during the LRFFT in Ontong Java. .... 155
Table 8.4. Comparison of total catch, and the component of which were groupers, between fishing activity in 1999 and during the LRFFT in Ontong Java. ......................... 155
Table 8.5. Occurrence of everyday consumption of LRFFT target species in Ontong Java. 158
Table 8.6. Average income by source for respondents from Ontong Java. .......................... 159
Table 8.7. Average expenditure by item for respondents from Ontong Java........................ 161
List of Figures
Figure 1.1. Annual exports of live food-fish from Indonesia and the Philippines. __________ 5
Figure 2.1. Incentive effects of economic instruments.______________________________ 14
Figure 3.1. Solomon Islands featuring the three areas that hosted the LRFFT. ___________ 31
Figure 5.1. Householder participation and mean hours spent per week conducting particular activities in the presence, and absence, of the LRFFT. _____________________ 72
Figure 5.2. Consumption and consumption frequency of LRFFT target species.__________ 81
Figure 5.3. Income by source in the 25-75% range for the regions that hosted the LRFFT. _ 83
Figure 5.4. Expenditure by source in the 25-75% range for the regions that hosted the LRFFT.________________________________________________________________ 85
Figure 5.6. Respondents in the three regions that hosted the LRFFT that believed issues surrounding management were important. ______________________________ 90
Figure 6.1. Marovo Lagoon, Western Province. __________________________________ 101
Figure 6.3. Consumption and consumption frequency of LRFFT target species in Marovo Lagoon. ________________________________________________________ 111
Figure 6.4. Income (SI$) by source in the 25-75% range for householders in Marovo Lagoon._______________________________________________________________ 113
Figure 6.5. Expenditure by item in the 25-75% range for respondents from Marovo Lagoon._______________________________________________________________ 115
Figure 6.6. Respondents from Marovo Lagoon that believed issues surrounding spawning aggregations were important. _______________________________________ 117
Figure 6.7. Respondents from Marovo Lagoon that believed issues surrounding management were important. __________________________________________________ 118
Figure 7.1. Roviana Lagoon, Western Province (Source: Aswani, 1997). ______________ 129
Figure 7.2. Participation in household activities in the presence and absence of the LRFFT.132
Figure 7.3. Consumption and consumption frequency of LRFFT target species in Roviana Lagoon. ________________________________________________________ 136
xii
Figure 7.4. Income by source (SI$) in the 25-75% range for householders in Roviana Lagoon._______________________________________________________________ 138
Figure 7.5. Expenditure by item in the 25-75% range for respondents from Roviana Lagoon._______________________________________________________________ 140
Figure 7.6. Respondents from Roviana Lagoon that believed issues surrounding grouper spawning aggregations were important. _______________________________ 141
Figure 7.7. Respondents from Roviana Lagoon that believed issues surrounding management were important. __________________________________________________ 142
Figure 8.1. Ontong Java Atoll. _______________________________________________ 151
Figure 8.2. Householder participation and hours spent per week conducting particular activities in the presence and absence of the LRFFT in Ontong Java. ________ 154
Figure 8.3. Consumption and consumption frequency of LRFFT target species in Ontong Java._______________________________________________________________ 156
Figure 8.4. Income by source (SI$) in the 25-75% range for householders in Ontong Java. 158
Figure 8.5. Expenditure by item in the 25-75% range for respondents from Ontong Java. _ 160
Figure 8.6. Respondents from Ontong Java that believed issues surrounding spawning aggregations were important. _______________________________________ 162
Figure 8.7. Respondents from Ontong Java that believed issues surrounding management were important._______________________________________________________ 163
1
Chapter 1: The Live Reef Food-Fish Trade
1.1 Introduction
The Asian economic prosperity of the 1980s and early to mid-1990s prompted the rapid
expansion of the market for live reef fish for food. The trade is driven by demand for live reef
fish from restaurants in cities with large Chinese populations, especially Hong Kong and
southeastern China, but also Taipei, Singapore and Kuala Lumpur (Johannes and Riepen,
1995). The demand is based on the perception that fish and prosperity are integrally linked,
and that the ultimate freshness of fish cooked and eaten moments after being personally
chosen from an aquarium has health and even virility enhancing qualities (Erdmann and Pet-
Soede, 1996). The demand is driven by socially desirable “conspicuous consumption”
(Bentley, 1999). Rapid growth in Southeast Asian economies gave rise to a burgeoning class
of affluent business people. A new genre of social elite arose whereby a person’s status was
announced by their willingness and ability to pay extraordinary sums of money to publicly
consume these fish. Weddings, banquets, birthdays and the closure of a business deal would
be celebrated in this way.
Hong Kong is the major market and trans-shipment point for live reef food fish, importing
approximately 17,000–20,000 tonnes during 2000. The live reef food-fish trade (LRFFT)
through Hong Kong was valued at approximately US$400 million that year. It is estimated
that 60-65% of all fish that are imported into Hong Kong are trans-shipped into the People’s
Republic of China (PRC) (McGilvray, 2001). As the economy of the PRC grows (7.8% in
2000), and with the recent entry into the World Trade Organisation, the demand for live reef
food fish in the major cities of China is likely to increase dramatically. In earlier market
analyses reported by Rimmer et al. (1997), it was concluded that the market was expected to
double every six years. However, Johannes and Riepen (1995) indicated that existing supply
sources were expected to be insufficient to satisfy projected demand. There are a number of
issues in the supply chain that render the fishery unsustainable and these emphasise the need
for rigorous management of the fishery in source countries.
Despite the recent economic downturn in Asia, the demand for live reef fish has continued to
grow. The expansion of the live reef fishery into the Pacific region is driven, additionally, by
the diminishing supply from Southeast Asian waters of target fish, due to over-exploitation
and habitat degradation. This increasing demand for live reef fish has encouraged the use of
destructive fishing methods, resulting in widespread devastation of coral reefs within
2
Southeast Asia. The most damaging of these methods is the use of sodium cyanide, an
extremely toxic chemical. In the Pacific region, pulse fishing that targets seasonal spawning
aggregations is the cause of greatest concern.
The overwhelming consumer demand for grouper and Maori wrasse, the species most
favoured by consumers, has encouraged importers to venture ever further, seeking previously
untapped stocks of the target species. The fishery has encountered many problems. Fishing
methods, such as the use of sodium cyanide, have resulted in the destruction of fish habitat
and the poisoning of smaller fish and invertebrates, upsetting trophic relationships. Research
into the species targeted for the LRFFT is in its infancy, but it is known that the Maori wrasse
(Cheilinis undulatus) lives for many decades and exhibits a slow growth rate, which generally
accompanies low replacement capacity (Sadovy, 1997). Consequently, the species is highly
susceptible to overexploitation. Maori wrasse and groupers (mostly Plectropomus spp. and
Epinephelus spp.) aggregate to spawn in accordance with highly predictable environmental
variables (Johannes, 1978, 1980; Pet and Pet-Soede, 1999) and it is these aggregations that
have been targeted for the LRFFT.
The fishery has proved highly unsustainable. In the Philippines and Indonesia, stocks of
grouper and Maori wrasse have been severely depleted. Importers have simply moved on to
exploit stocks from coral reefs further afield, including the South and Western Pacific. There
is concern about the degree of post-harvest mortality, which is sometimes as high as 90 per
cent (Sadovy, 1998a). Concerns also arise about the amount of incidental bycatch and about
appropriation of economic rent by non resource-owners. Unsustainable exploitation of
nearshore marine resources has grave implications for many thousands of coastal
communities in Southeast Asia and the Pacific.
1.2 History and Development of the LRFFT
Johannes and Riepen (1995) stated that Hong Kong fishers first began to exploit reefs for live
food fish in the South China Sea as early as 1968. Live fish had, customarily, been kept
specifically for consumption shortly after killing, but mostly these were freshwater species or
a few locally caught marine species. After 1968, however, consumers were increasingly
exposed to large and colourful tropical reef fish. Consumption of freshly killed fish is thought
to redeem “life strength”. From an ethereal perspective, Oomen (1998 p.58) pointed to the
cultural connection between freshly killed live reef fish and the Chinese myth of the rebirth of
a celestial sea dragon out of a 1,000-year-old Maori wrasse or a spotted coral trout. Oomen
3
described the process of “choosing a live reef fish, ordering it to be prepared according to a
culturally acknowledged recipe and consuming the dish with appropriate manners” as taking
part in an ancient performance. Eating effigies of mythical creatures strengthens one’s life
force and suggests congruence between ancestral devotion and rebirthing of celestial beings.
Johannes and Riepen (1995) suggested, however, that the state of the Hang Seng Index was
likely to be the best indicator of local demand for live reef fish.
The massive industrial cities of southern China are home to the fastest growth in demand for
live reef fish (Lau and Parry Jones, 1999). China has achieved extraordinary economic growth
for a number of years and the cities in the south of the country have experienced phenomenal
growth, both in terms of population and prosperity. The demand from wealthy Chinese in the
business centres of Taipei, Kuala Lumpur and Singapore has also continued to grow. As a
consequence, importing companies have expanded the search for the desired species in an
effort to capitalise on the potential wealth generating opportunity.
With this rise in demand, Hong Kong fishers exploited and depleted the more remote reefs
and islands of the South China Sea. In 1975, the trade moved into the Philippines. The coral
reefs of the Philippines and the vast archipelago of Indonesia, represent some of the
biologically richest regions in the world (Barber and Pratt, 1997). It was amid this biological
wealth and diversity that much of the supply of aquarium fish were gleaned from as early as
1957 to fill collections in the United States and Europe (Dufour, 1997). Barber and Pratt
(1997) stated that 85 percent of ornamental aquarium fish are captured in the Indo-Pacific
region. From 1962, the collection process involved stunning the fish with concentrated
sodium cyanide, making them easier to capture (McAllister et al., 1999). It is not apparent
exactly when the use of cyanide spread to the LRFFT.
Operations in the LRFFT originally began with foreign vessels and crew. The trade was
dominated by large, self-contained vessels that took the fish to the market themselves.
However, the structure of the trade changed. Local fishers were enticed into the industry by
the lure of the relatively high value of live fish, and exporters found it cheaper to employ
locals than to bring in their own crews (Bentley, 1999). Additionally, legislation made it
necessary to hire local fishers in some areas. Transport arrangements, primarily for transport
to Hong Kong but also to Malaysia and Singapore, saw the introduction of specialised Live
Fish Transport Vessels (LFTV). Fishers captured live fish and stored them temporarily in
specially fitted saltwater compartments within the hulls of their craft, the size of which varied
depending on the scale of the operation.
4
Companies set up holding pens in proximity to major fishing areas. Indrawan (1999) reported
that these typically consist of wooden planks and nylon nets, tied to plastic drum buoys. One
holding pen typically includes four to eight cages measuring three by three by four metres.
Each fisher’s daily catch is weighed before being placed in the pen and the fisher is paid
according to the catch. When the accumulated catch is sufficient to warrant transport, which is
ideally 15 tonnes but could be as much as 30 tonnes, the LFTV transports the catch to market.
These conditions vary regionally. In areas where airfreight is both viable and accessible, fish
are often shipped by air.
1.3 Exporting Countries
1.3.1 Indonesia and Philippines
The LRFFT was established in the western reefs of Indonesia in 1985 and spread quickly to
the extensive reefs of eastern Indonesia (Bentley, 1999). In 1996 exports declined sharply.
There is an average of 24 fisher households for each of the country’s 27,000 nautical miles of
coastline. Many of these households rely on coral reefs as a primary source of food and
income, particularly in eastern Indonesia. Johannes and Riepen (1995) stated that Indonesia
accounted for more than half of the total wild-caught reef fish supplied to Hong Kong and
Singapore. These figures were similar to those reported by Bentley (1999) but were refuted by
Erdmann and Pet-Soede (1996), who calculated that Indonesia’s export of live food fish for
the same period was between one third and two thirds of that from the Philippines. This
highlights the difficulty in quantifying the extent of the trade and rates of exploitation of these
species. The authors emphasised the boom and bust nature of the industry in Indonesia and
concurred in foreseeing the collapse of the fishery there in the mid to late 1990s. Lau and
Parry-Jones (1999) highlighted the difficulty in obtaining reliable figures on imports by
source from Hong Kong. Locally registered vessels in Hong Kong are exempt from
declaration of live reef food fish. As there are about 1,600 locally licensed vessels, the
recorded import level is potentially much less than the actual import level.
5
Figure 1.1. Annual exports of live food-fish from Indonesia and the Philippines.
Annual exports of live reef food-fish from Indonesia and the Philippines are illustrated in
Figure 1.1. These data are extrapolated from Bentley (1999) based on figures from the
Indonesian Directorate General of Fisheries, Philippines National Statistics Office and Sabah
Department of Fisheries. Clearly, there was a drastic decline experienced after 1995. In the
Philippines, the total number of exporting companies dropped by almost half, from 31 in 1994
to 17 in 1996.
Alvarez (1996) reported that in the first six months of 1996, 19 local companies exported a
total of 479 tonnes of live grouper and Maori wrasse with an estimated value of about US$30
million from the Philippines. Fishers were paid as much as US$14kg-1 for live grouper and
twice as much for live Maori wrasse. The intermediaries would sell the fish to Manila-based
exporters for about US$36kg-1. After costs such as airfreight, packaging and handling, the
profit to intermediaries was estimated by the International Marinelife Alliance (IMA) to be
about US$8kg-1. This equates to a profit of more than US$3.8 million for the intermediaries
alone for a period of six months. Alvarez added that the LRFFT effectively heralded a decline
in the widespread use of dynamite “blast fishing” in the mid 1980s because the income
potential from capturing live fish far surpassed that of the dead catch. Unfortunately, the
substitute fishing method was often sodium cyanide. The establishment of the LRFFT and the
spiraling demand for aquarium fish from the mid 1980s resulted in the application of cyanide,
escalating to about 400,000kg annually (Alvarez, 1996).
The trade in live reef food-fish in the Philippines today is greatly reduced because of reef
degradation caused by the use of chemicals and explosives. The extent of damage to reefs
from destructive fishing practices has affected the ability of inhabitants of coastal villages to
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996
Annual Exports (t)
Indonesia Philippines
6
live in their customary manner. Filemon Romero, former chancellor of Mindanao State
University, quoted in Alvarez (1996 p22), stated:
“…coral reef degradation has cost the country a lot in terms of fish production
loss, diminished income possibilities and the high incidence of malnutrition,
undernourishment, unemployment and urban migration”.
1.3.2 Pacific Region
The downward trend in the productivity of reefs in the Philippines and Indonesia, and the
consistently high and probably growing demand has encouraged companies to establish the
LRFFT in the Western Pacific and the Indian Ocean. From 1992, live reef fish export
operations were established in Papua New Guinea (PNG) and, soon after, spread east to
Solomon Islands and the Marshall Islands, and west to the Maldives. Operations began on
Australia’s Great Barrier Reef in 1995, while Kiribati, Fiji and the Seychelles commenced
shortly thereafter. Fledgling operations have commenced ever further afield in the Indian and
Pacific Oceans (Johannes and Riepen, 1995).
Several companies from Hong Kong established the trade in PNG by 1992, where the remote
and extensive coral reefs were considered to be the “new frontier” for the industry (Johannes
and Riepen, 1995 p.49). The vast and scattered nature of the coral reef assemblage in Papua
New Guinea, together with the paucity of fisheries management resources, limits the degree to
which management and enforcement are possible. Kirkpatrick and Cook (1997) reported that
in an effort to head off the establishment of a cyanide fishing foothold there, The Nature
Conservancy and other Non Governmental Organisations (NGOs) united to design and
implement a major conservation education program in villages to combat the practice.
From 1994, two companies set up operations in Solomon Islands at Marovo, Vella La Vella
and Roviana Lagoons, then later in the northern atoll of Ontong Java (Johannes and Lam,
1999). Smith (1997) reported that, from late 1994, three operations were established in the
Republic of Marshall Islands, with joint ventures set up between local entrepreneurs and
companies from Hong Kong and Taiwan. Fishing for live coral trout began in earnest on the
Great Barrier Reef in Australia in 1995. Elmer (1998) reported that the LRFFT on Australia’s
Great Barrier Reef has attracted considerable interest from commercial operators. In 1998,
there were about 110 licensed operators and there was an estimated direct capital investment
of AUD$19 million in boats and land-based premises, exclusively for live fish operations. The
trade in Australia is largely free of many of the destructive and unsustainable aspects that
7
characterise the fishery in developing countries in the Asia-Pacific region. In other areas of
the Pacific, Kiribati began operations in early 1996 (Sommerville and Pendle, 1999); and Fiji
began cautiously pursuing the opening of live fish operations in 1998 (Yeeting, 1999).
1.3.3 Other Source Countries
On the other side of the Pacific Ocean, a live fishery has operated in California since 1988.
The target species are different from those targeted for the Asian LRFFT, although the fishery
was initially established in order to service demand from the local Asian community (Tegner
and Dayton, 1997). In the Indian Ocean, Shakeel and Ahmed (1997) stated that the fishery for
live groupers started in the Maldives in 1994; and Bentley and Aumeeruddy (1999) described
the experimental export of live fish from the Seychelles in 1998. There are also fledgling
operations in Eritrea, Tanzania, Kuwait, Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand, Tonga and Vanuatu
(Johannes and Riepen, 1995; Barber and Pratt, 1997).
The LRFFT now straddles a large area of the tropical marine environment. In many locations,
the trade is yet to experience the type of degradation experienced in the coral reefs and coastal
communities of the Philippines and Indonesia. The trade is characterised by its mobility and
there is no bricks-and-mortar infrastructure. There is minimal involvement of local
communities in the market chain beyond capturing live fish for collection, and the operation
can be conducted in regions remote from urban facilities and services. Holding pens are
collapsible and the whole operation can relocate at short notice upon the exhaustion of
resources at a particular site.
With the LRFFT expanding its geographical distribution, it is important that the countries
now embracing the industry learn from the mistakes and consequences of the trade in
countries such as the Philippines and Indonesia. Bentley (1999 p.9) highlighted this in noting:
“…for most regions, once exports began, it took only three to four years for them
to reach a peak and then to decline. Like a wave, the industry has spread
throughout the country; live fish exports rising and falling in its wake”.
This serves to emphasise the need to manage live reef fisheries in a way that allows fisheries
resources to be exploited in a sustainable manner. The short-term gains by a relative few in
countries such as the Philippines have resulted in longer-term hardships for many other
people.
8
1.3.4 Aquaculture/Mariculture
Since production from marine fisheries peaked at about 100 million tonnes and has begun to
decline (Brown et al., 1994), aquaculture production, which doubled from 1984 to 1992
(Williams, 1996) is seen a means of balancing the decline. However, in the LRFFT, diners in
Hong Kong restaurants are believed to prefer wild caught fish to those reared in captivity.
Rimmer et al. (1998) stated that there was increased interest in grouper mariculture
throughout the world, but particularly in the Asia-Pacific region because of the level of
demand and the potential returns from the product. Most fish culture in Southeast Asia is
based on the collection of juveniles from the wild and their grow-out in captivity to
marketable size (Sadovy and Pet, 1998). Dato-Cajegas et al. (1998) noted that commercial
hatchery production is restricted to Taiwan, although experimental hatcheries were
establishing throughout Asia. Johannes and Ogburn (1999) noted that Taiwan still imports
wild-caught grouper fry because it has not yet been able to produce fry in sufficient numbers
in its hatcheries.
Most of the marine fry imported to Hong Kong comes from Taiwan, Thailand and Japan (Lau
and Parry-Jones, 1999). Sadovy and Pet (1998) stated concern that the collection of wild
juveniles for grouper mariculture may be another capture fishery. This concern is based on the
timing of peak rates of mortality among grouper juveniles. Less than one per cent of larvae
survive the pelagic larval development stage before settlement on coral reefs. There is then
intense predation by larger fish associated with the reef (Bell et al., 1999). If the peak
mortality period is during the planktonic phase, then the post-settlement harvesting of
juveniles may be unsustainable because the fishing mortality would represent a substantial
proportion of total mortality, and the fishery would need to be managed to avoid overfishing.
Williams (1996) noted that this is an important link between aquaculture and fisheries that is
often ignored because the sectors have been viewed in isolation. However, Bell et al. (1999)
argued that if sections of reef are quarantined from predatory fish, the postlarvae could be
harvested in a way that does not jeopardise natural rates of replenishment.
Johannes and Ogburn (1999) pointed out that hatchery technology for grouper is not yet well
established and that, despite extensive research, commercial success has been limited due to
the high level of mortality. Bell et al. (1999) stated that it is better to first establish successful
grow-out aquaculture of high-value species of reef fish. Propagating larvae from hatcheries
incurs high cost. Munro and Bell (1997) endorsed the use of wild caught juveniles and added
9
that the use of juveniles from hatcheries was often associated with alterations to the gene pool
and the transfer of diseases.
Current research into grouper mariculture in the Asia-Pacific region has emerged from
Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines and Japan. Development of effective hatcheries has been a
major focus of research. The species that frequently feature in aquaculture ventures and
research are the estuary cod (sometimes called green grouper), Epinephelus coioides and the
Malabar grouper, E. malabaricus (Johannes, 1997). The grouper aquaculture research effort
has covered aspects of hatchery spawning (e.g. Sugama et al., 1998), feeding (e.g. Millamena
and Golez, 1998; Ordonio-Aguilar and Ohno, 1998; Toledo, 1999), ambient conditions (e.g.
Caberoy and Quinitio, 1998a), parasite infestations (e.g. Koesharyani et al. 1998), the effects
of steroid variation on the timing of sex reversal (e.g. Lee et al., 1998; Yashiro et al., 1998),
handling requirements (e.g. Caberoy and Quinitio, 1998b) and the mitigation of viral infection
(e.g. Chi et al., 1999; Lee et al., 1999). A cooperative network has been established for the
exchange and dissemination of research information in the region (Rimmer et al., 1998).
1.4 Scope of the Study
Coastal marine resources in Pacific islands are particularly important for food security.
Coastal fishing methods and the main target species are extremely varied, and may differ
geographically even over small scales. Most of these fisheries occur on coral reefs, which are
among the most diverse ecosystems in the world, on a par with tropical rainforests. Whilst
coral reefs have high species richness, the number of individuals of these varied species is
usually low, and coral reefs are thought to be particularly sensitive to exploitation and indirect
anthropogenic influences. Increasing human populations, which are almost entirely settled on
the coast, create additional problems for sustainable resource use. Resource management and
monitoring are thus key issues for island countries.
There are major interactions between fisheries development, coral reef ecosystems and
demography such that the study of fishing, especially subsistence fishing, requires the
integration of research on the ecology of the reefs and their resources with research on coastal
economies and societies. This has consequences for development and management programs
and the evaluation of their impact on village communities.
The demographic and food issues associated with fishing are at the focal point of fisheries
dynamics. Consequently, this thesis examines the various components of the LRFFT and
10
focuses on the social dynamics and development opportunities in Solomon Islands. The major
component will focus on the socio-economic impacts and potential benefits of the LRFFT.
However, as the research project from which this thesis has developed seeks to establish a
management plan that will place the LRFFT on a sustainable footing, coverage will include
environmental costs associated with the fishery and possible avenues for amelioration, the
traditional and contemporary foundation upon which the LRFFT can be managed, and the
monitoring and information requirements necessary for adaptive management of the fishery.
It will conclude with an outline of the management prescriptions for sustainable management
of the LRFFT in Solomon Islands.
1.5 Aims and Objectives
This thesis stems from a project funded by the Australian Centre for International Agricultural
Research, which was devised in response to claims from the Solomon Islands government that
the LRFFT in that country was conducted in a manner considered unsustainable. The project
sought to establish a plan of management that would see the fishery conducted on a
sustainable basis.
The population in Solomon Islands is overwhelmingly rural with largely subsistence
economies at the village level. However, urban migration and cash dependence are growing
phenomena. Unsustainable conduct of the LRFFT was considered a threat to the social and
cultural fabric of the majority of the population, one that threatened food security and, in light
of high population growth, the tenability of the village life.
As a consequence, the major component of the project, as with this thesis, was to establish
data on the existing socio-economic climate in the three regions that hosted the LRFFT, and
to gauge the impacts that accompanied participation in the trade.
The aim of the thesis is to assemble the information necessary to establish management of the
LRFFT in Solomon Islands on a sustainable footing. The primary focus is the socio-economic
component. Attention is additionally given to the natural heritage considerations and the
customary and institutional structure upon which the trade might be managed, as these
components have direct implications for the village population.
The following objectives outline the manner in which this aim is achieved:
11
1. Describe the dynamics of the LRFFT in the Indo-Pacific and the Solomon Islands
experience.
2. Describe the concept of sustainability and its application to the LRFFT including the
biological and ecological implications of intensively fishing spawning aggregations.
3. Describe the customary and institutional structure upon which the trade might be
managed.
4. Describe the existing socio-economic climate in the three regions that hosted the LRFFT
and gauge the impacts that accompanied participation in the trade.
5. Detail the management prescriptions for the sustainable management of the LRFFT in
Solomon Islands.
12
Chapter 2: Sustainability and the LRFFT
2.1 The Concept of Sustainability
A report from the World Commission on Environment and Development (1987), known as
the Brundtland Report, defined sustainable development in terms of ‘resource development’
and ‘economic activity’ that meet the needs of the present generation without compromising
the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. Humans ultimately depend on
natural ecosystems to meet most of their basic needs. However, as Pajak (2000) noted,
compelling scientific evidence indicates that ecological and, consequently, societal health is
threatened worldwide. Human population densities, consumption, and technology are among
the pervasive pressures connecting and affecting sustainability at every level. In 1992, the
National Strategy for Ecologically Sustainable Development broadened this definition,
describing ESD as “using, conserving and enhancing the community’s resources so that
ecological processes, on which life depends, are maintained, and the total quality of life, now
and in the future, can be increased” (Commonwealth of Australia, 1992).
However, it can now be presumed that no development is likely to be sustainable if it is not
‘ecologically sustainable’. Furthermore, it is apparent that the concept of sustaining the
functional integrity of natural systems that support life for humans and other organisms
conveys responsibilities on communities to ‘live’ in a manner that is sustainable, which
contributes to a broadening of the term from ‘sustainable development’ to ‘sustainability’. It
also requires institutions to manage not only ‘resource development’ and ‘economic activity’
in a manner that does not deplete the natural capital that we borrow from future generations,
but also to ensure that intragenerational equity is enhanced by reforming inefficiencies in
resource use byproducts such as waste production, water use and land management that might
result in such effects as habitat degradation, decline in food production or inhibiting the
assimilative capacity of the environment.
2.1.1 Institutional Role in Achieving Sustainability
Institutional obligations, in this regard, refer to the application of suitable incentives and
disincentives for the private sector to adopt production methods that are consistent with the
principles of sustainability. Incentives, from the use of economic instruments, usually entail
longer-term financial benefit from the adoption of technology that maximises efficiency,
thereby increasing market competitiveness. Disincentives usually entail legislative and/or
13
punitive measures for non-compliance with minimum standards. A combination of both of the
approaches is preferable, with minimum standards based on the best scientific advice
available. Regulatory control alone has proved unsuccessful because of costs, both monetary
and in social terms, associated with enforcement.
Davis and Gartside (2001) stated that regulations alone will most likely not result in the most
efficient use being made of scarce resources because they took no account of costs and
provide no incentive for groups, for example polluters, to continue to improve beyond the set
regulatory limit. They used an example of effluent input to an estuary. The effluent
represents: a cost to society in terms of restricting recreational activities and detracting from
aesthetic value; a cost to the natural environment in terms of degradation of habitat; and an
economic cost in terms of the loss of juveniles of commercial species, and the opportunity
cost of economic multipliers arising from recreational and commercial activities. At point A
in Figure 2.1, regulations might be introduced requiring polluters to reduce output to below a
set standard (point B) within a given period of time. However, there is no incentive to reduce
pollution to ever lower levels. The polluters will reduce their output as required but will
continue to pollute at a level represented by line CD. Economic instruments are implemented
to provide the incentive for continued reduction in pollution along the line of ACE.
Regulation alone would then constitute a loss to society represented by the hatched area,
which would likely increase with time and advancements in technology. Economic
instruments, therefore, act as a practical means for achieving the principles of sustainability.
A sound legislative framework will ensure that minimum standards are met and economic
instruments give producers incentive to improve on them. Consequently, the two mechanisms
should be adopted to operate in unison.
14
Figure 2.1. Incentive effects of economic instruments.
Turner et al. (1994) suggested that market based incentives could modify markets by centrally
deciding the value of natural resources and environmental services, and ensuring that those
values are incorporated in the prices of those goods and services. An example of such a
market-based incentive approach could include annual licenses, which attract a purchase fee
and convey a suite of conditions to which the licensee must adhere. In maximizing yield,
while acting in accordance with such conditions, producers of goods and services have a clear
incentive to maximise efficiency. Market based incentives are usually designed to correct
market failure, which occurs when the price for goods and services does not reflect the true
value of the resources being used to produce them, including the full cost of degradation of
those resources. In using a market-based incentive, the licensee has incentive to conserve the
resources being exploited, thereby internalising the costs associated with resource
degradation.
Harden (1968) argued that the resources of the ‘commons’, or more succinctly, open access
resources, would be competed away because there would be no incentive for anybody to
conserve. However, where there is a set of clearly defined property rights, such as those
conveyed upon a licensee, all of the benefits that might be accrued to the licensee, for
example, from the exploitation of resources referred to in the terms of the license, are accrued
exclusively. Conversely, any or all detriment to those resources are incurred exclusively by
A
B
CD
E
Pollution Level
Time
15
the holder of those property rights – in this example the licensee. Consequently, there is
incentive for the property right holder to conserve the integrity of the resource and maximise
efficiency so as to reduce costs and maximise benefit.
This designation of a property rights structure conveys ownership upon the right holder.
Bromley (1992) explained that, in an economic sense, property referred to a stream of benefits
or income and a property right is a claim to this stream. The definition of property,
consequently, is not limited to physical or geographic entities (Davis and Gartside, 2001).
Scott and Johnson (1985) described the general characteristics of property rights in the
following terms:
� Exclusivity;
� Right to enforce exclusive use;
� Transferability to others;
� Right to determination of use;
� Duration and timing of rights; and
� Provision for payment.
In terms of the example of a license as a market-based incentive to correct market failure, the
license is characterised by permission given by the occupier of the land to do something that
would otherwise amount to trespass. Enforcement of compliance with license conditions often
determines whether the property rights are functional or non-functional. It also infers that
property rights and governance are interrelated because of the importance of knowing who
owns the rights (individuals, communities or government), how those rights can be enforced
(Tisdell and Roy, 1997), and serves as a reminder that ownership of an asset is not unfettered
because the law generally imposes some restrictions (Pearce, 1992).
Application of these principles to the management of the LRFFT in Solomon Islands does not
present a complex and insurmountable problem. Customary access rights to resources within
delineated estates of land and sea will be discussed in greater detail in Chapter 8 (Section 8.3).
In brief, however, Chiefs manage the estates. Management infers governance and this
includes rules regarding the exploitation of natural resources, usually fisheries, forestry and
mining. Marine resources sustain the population so fishing for subsistence is generally
unfettered. The Chiefs have, however, traditionally enacted spatial and temporal closures to
enable stock recovery. Enforcement of such measures is conducted at the local level and there
are mechanisms in place for punitive measures for non-compliance. A full range of clearly
16
defined property rights exist. Any exploitation for commercial purposes, however, requires
permission from the Chief and his council, if the exploitation is to be conducted by anybody
other than a primary rights holder. In this instance, conditions attached to such permission
would be outlined in a license. The conditions would place a series of restrictions on
exploitation such that the licensee is given incentive to maximise the efficiency of the
operation. In the case of the LRFFT, this would entail minimising post harvest losses through
improving handling, storage and transportation. Such improvements might include air
freighting smaller quantities on a more regular basis and adding value by purchasing and
marketing bycatch species domestically. Local level monitoring and enforcement of license
conditions would apply but the license would require endorsement by the relevant provincial
and national government agencies. Consequently, compliance with license conditions would
be subject to legislative application and all the enforcement measures that this infers.
2.2 Sustainability Issues in the LRFFT
Fisheries, in general, face intense pressure from burgeoning populations. Worldwide, sea
catches have multiplied fourfold in the last 50 years. More than a billion people, living in 40
developing countries, risk being deprived of their main source of protein because of the over-
exploitation of fishery reserves associated with an increase in export demand (UNDP, 1996).
The lives of the inhabitants of the Pacific region’s 2,700 islands are closely entwined with the
ocean. People depend heavily on the marinelife of coastal waters for food and income.
Cultural identity, traditional beliefs, customs and general social structure are integrally linked
to the sea as the peoples principal means of survival. Today, in the face of increasing reliance
of rural people on the cash economy, commercial exploitation of hitherto subsistence
resources, and rapidly increasing population, the cultural fabric of traditional island society is
threatened. Experience in the Philippines and Indonesia indicates that migration to urban areas
is a possible consequence when resources in the village are inadequate to sustain the local
populous. Customary beliefs and traditional skills are heavily diluted in the urban
environment. In the LRFFT, a number of issues have exacerbated the decline in resources and
the social problems that stem from them. The following sections address the issues that have
arisen from LRFFT activities in the Indo-Pacific region.
17
2.2.1 Habitat Degradation from Sodium Cyanide Use
In the Philippines and Indonesia, premium prices paid for live fish encouraged the use of
cyanide, causing widespread damage. Divers use sodium cyanide to immobilise the target fish
so that they can be captured, then revived, and held in floating pens. Cyanide affects far more
than just the target species. Smaller fish and invertebrates are less resistant to cyanide, and
many die for each target fish captured. Most importantly, the coral habitat upon which the rest
of the reef community depends is killed. Cyanide kills reef corals at concentrations hundreds
of times lower than the typical concentrations used by divers in their squirt bottles (Jones and
Steven, 1997). Additional damage is caused through the breaking of corals to remove the fish
after stunning. Where traps have been used in the fishery, large coral pieces are often broken
off and placed on and around the traps as weights and to assist in attracting fish to the
structure (Johannes and Riepen, 1995).
In Asia, as reef fish stocks dwindle, the use of cyanide by desperate and impoverished
fishermen often becomes increasingly indiscriminate. While litre-sized bottles are normally
used to administer the poison (at a concentration of approximately 13 grams per litre), in
some cases fishers have reportedly dumped whole 200 litre drums of the poison into shallow
reef communities (Johannes and Riepen, 1995). Under ideal conditions, the recovery of
damaged coral reef communities could take several decades, but ideal conditions are highly
unlikely in the typically overpopulated coastal regions of those countries. While devastating
to reef communities, cyanide rarely reaches concentrations in target fish that are thought to be
toxic to the human consumers.
The use of cyanide as a technique for capturing fish, is far from unique to the LRFFT. Barber
and Pratt (1997) pointed out that, since the 1960s, more than a million kilograms of sodium
cyanide had been squirted onto coral reefs in the Philippines alone, in order to stun and
capture ornamental aquarium fish for pet shops in Europe and North America. Dufour (1997)
noted that, due to the difficulty of raising ornamental fish in captivity, the fishery was based
on collection from the natural environment. This collection accounted for about 100 tonnes
worldwide annually by the late 1990s and included millions of specimens. Dufour added that
the aquarium fish trade had doubled since the early 1980s and attributed the increase,
primarily, to an increase in air traffic resulting from increased tourism to tropical countries
since about 1980. This served to intensify the use of cyanide on coral reefs, particularly in the
Philippines and Indonesia (Fox, 1997).
18
Alvarez (1996) reported that there were more than 4,000 cyanide-using aquarium fish
gatherers in the Philippines and another 2,000 engaged in live food fish collection. Barber and
Pratt (1997) endorsed these figures, and added that the number of cyanide fishers in the Indo-
Pacific region was probably about 20,000. In the early 1960s, there were only three
companies exporting aquarium fish from the Philippines and the export of live food fish did
not exist. By the 1990s, there were about 45 ornamental fish exporters in the country, and
eight companies exporting live food fish. Philippines government statistics showed that as
many as six million aquarium fish were exported in 1996 (Barber and Pratt, 1997).
Johannes and Riepen (1995) described the process of capturing fish with the use of cyanide.
The diver chases a large fish into a hole within the coral reef framework. The diver squirts the
sodium cyanide solution into the hole then waits. While smaller fishes and invertebrates in the
vicinity die from the poison, the larger fish is stupefied. The diver smashes his way through
the coral that harbours the fish. When he reaches the fish, he forces a hook, attached to a rope,
through its lips and returns to the skiff to place it in the seawater holding tank. Sometimes the
fish escapes or is stupefied but is unable to be retrieved. Either way, the destruction to the reef
and smaller organisms is the same. The rate of post-harvest mortality is often 40-60 per cent
before the fish are transported to market, mostly because of poor handling and storage
techniques. More fish die in transit before they reach their final destination. For every fish that
dies, another must be caught to meet the seemingly insatiable demand.
The impact on coral reef habitats and on smaller fish and invertebrates caught in the cloud of
cyanide is devastating. In a study of the effects of cyanide on coral, Jones and Steven (1997)
concluded that, at the concentration of cyanide commonly used by the fishers (about 20 parts
per thousand), a reduction or cessation of coral respiration would ensue. Jones and Hoegh-
Guldberg (1999) expanded this study and concluded that this would result in a dissociation of
the coral-algal symbiosis by affecting the photosynthesis of the zooxanthellae and result in the
inevitable bleaching of the coral. The consequences of this are a reduction in phototrophic
potential and a decrease in growth rate and fecundity. Jones and Steven (1997) stated that re-
establishing the symbiosis could take six months to a year or more. Broken corals may take
many years to re-establish as habitat for large demersal fish species. Barber and Pratt (1997)
described the physical damage to the reef matrix from the use of a crowbar to pry apart the
coral heads to reach the stunned fish. Pet and Pet-Soede (1999) explained that when a single
grouper is captured, more than a square metre of coral is destroyed when the fish is removed
from its hiding place. Erdmann and Pet-Soede (1996) described the scene of a fully exploited
19
reef in eastern Indonesia as being completely devoid of serranids fish of all ages, and a ring of
dead, bleached coral surrounding every hole in the reef structure.
2.2.2 The Cycle of Debt
Pet-Soede and Erdmann (1998) noted that many divers using sodium cyanide are supported
by hookahs. Hookah divers, whether using cyanide or setting traps, are mostly unfamiliar with
dive physics and diving physiology. Jacques (1997) account of his studies in Indonesia
highlighted the human cost of the LRFFT in remote coastal villages. Jacques described the
well organised and well financed operation in eastern Indonesia, where a fleet of numbered,
fibreglass vessels operated with a crew of two. One dived and the other tended the
compressor. He witnessed one diver make nine rapid descents and equally rapid ascents in 90
minutes. There were no decompression stops. The company had told the villagers how much
money they could make but gave them scant diving tuition. Johannes and Djohani (1997)
noted that divers cited chronic debt as the reason for breaching dive safety standards. Hookah
gear costs about US$800, a sum that is well beyond the means of the majority of divers. The
divers borrow the money from intermediaries who buy their catch. The intermediaries
pressure the divers to repay the debt as quickly as possible, urging them to make up to four
dives a day for an average duration of 40 minutes at depths of up to 45m. Thousands of divers
have been paralysed and hundreds killed in the past decade in the Philippines and Indonesia
because of decompression sickness (Johannes and Riepen, 1995). Lyle Squire (pers. comm.,
2000) pointed out that divers were aware of the onset of symptoms of the bends but referred
to them as “sea ghosts”. Most of the divers are young men for whom fear of sea ghosts was
considered a slight on their manhood. Consequently, they continued to dive, ignoring the
symptoms.
The inequitable, oppressive trading system faced by fish collectors resulted in many village
fishers being heavily in debt. The need to meet repayments accentuated the need to capture as
many fish as possible. There is significant incentive for indebted fishers to use whatever
means possible to maximise their catch (Haribon Foundation, 1998). Barber and Pratt (1997)
stated that poverty was not the root cause of cyanide fishing. However, poverty is certainly an
inevitable result of cyanide fishing. Dead reefs yield no fish or invertebrates. Whenever these
food sources begin to recover, they are harvested by villagers, thus prolonging re-
establishment. Economic dislocation in the countryside from debt and depleted subsistence
resources has led to malnutrition and urban migration (Alvarez, 1996). In some areas of the
Philippines, coral reefs have suffered as a result of pollution from urban runoff, sedimentation
20
from logging and mining operations, and eutrophication from poor agricultural practices
(Johannes and Riepen, 1995). In addition to these impacts on food sources, destruction of reef
ecosystems also detracts from the country’s ability to fully capitalise on other potential
sources of income such as the lucrative dive tourism market.
2.2.3 Poorly Defined Property Rights
The Haribon Foundation (1998) highlighted the open access nature of the marine resources in
the Philippines. Fishers lack incentive to conserve and protect their coral reefs. If one fisher
does not catch a particular fish, then somebody else will. This encourages fishers to maximise
their personal gain at the expense of restraint for the sake of conservation. Johannes and
Riepen (1995) reported that decentralisation of fisheries management was gradually being
established in the Philippines, whereby local marine tenure is granted to fisher associations.
This results in community-based control of marine resources. The navy supports enforcement.
Local government has jurisdiction over municipal waters up to 15km from shore. These
factors offer improved property rights and a sense of ownership of marine resources, so that
the owner accrues all the benefits from the resource but is equally responsible for any
detriment that is caused. This gives fishers greater incentive to use their resources in a
sustainable manner.
The World Bank (1998) stated that implementation of management plans in Indonesia was
constrained by lack of funds and staffing. Marine management has been hampered by weak
enforcement of existing regulations, and lack of delineation of user property rights for
nearshore areas. Mantjoro (1996) suggested that lessons could be learned from the Para
fishing community. Fishers there founded the basis of management, established an effective
organisation, constructed the equity share principle, invented and enforced regulations, and
meted out the punishments for non-compliance. The delegation of authority to the local
community, to establish their own sea tenure system, is considered a pivotal element in the
management of communal property resources. The World Bank (1998) added that reef
management has been most successful where communities have been organised and
empowered to manage local reef resources. Local government endorsement of management
plans and recognition of community user rights are essential to ensure the sustainable use of
marine resources.
21
2.2.4 Economic Impacts of Reef Habitat Destruction
In Indonesia, degradation of reef resources from mining operations, blast fishing and sodium
cyanide application, for both the aquarium trade and the LRFFT, has reduced the viability of
reef systems as a vital source of food and as a potential income earner. The World Bank
(1998) noted that a high demand for marine products, opportunities for substantial private
gains, weak enforcement of existing laws, and an open access regime that discourages
community action, exacerbate these threats. Cesar et al. (1997 p.346) estimated that:
“…the large-scale poison fishery create(d) a net quantifiable loss of US$46
million over four years. Alternatively, a sustainable hook-and-line fisheries option
could create foreign exchange for the country, jobs for an estimated 10,000
Indonesian fishers for many years to come, and net benefits of some US$328.1
million”.
Pet-Soede et al. (1999) analysed the economic costs and benefits of blast fishing in Indonesia.
Analysis of the benefit gained from three scales of operation indicated that, at the individual
household level, the differences between the three types of operations showed clear incentives
for scale enlargement. The economic costs to society were found to be four times higher than
the total net private benefits from blast fishing in areas with high potential value from tourism
and coastal protection. Edinger et al. (1998) surveyed 15 reefs in three regions of Indonesia
and found that bombed or anchor damaged reefs were 50 per cent less diverse in shallow
water (3m depth) than were undamaged reefs in the same region. Reefs subject to land-based
pollution (sewage, sedimentation, and/or industrial pollution) showed 30-50 per cent reduced
diversity at 3m, and 40-60 per cent reduced diversity at 10m depth relative to unpolluted
comparison reefs in each region. The World Bank (1998) estimated that as much as 70 per
cent of the reefs of Indonesia are in poor to fair condition, primarily due to sedimentation,
land-based pollution, coral mining, physical damage, and over-extraction of marine products.
2.2.5 Ciguatera Poisoning
Expansion of the LRFFT into the Western Pacific brought with it some unexpected problems
for consumers in the importing countries. For example, there is a growing risk to consumers
of ciguatera poisoning (Sadovy, 1998b). Ciguatoxins are naturally occurring in reef predators.
Ciguatera poisoning is caused by a neurotoxin found in microscopic dinoflagellate algae
called Gambierdiscus toxicus and Ostreopsis lenticularis. The toxin first affects the coral-
grazing fish and is then passed up and accumulating through the food chain to the piscivorous
22
fish (notably grouper in this instance but also prevalent in Spanish mackerel), and finally to
humans. The toxin is not affected by either cooking or freezing (Bomber, 1991). The species
that are implicated in ciguatera outbreaks are those that are targeted for the LRFFT. Sadovy
(1999) reported that some of the Western Pacific sites being exploited proved to be sources of
significant numbers of ciguatoxic fishes, which resulted in hundreds of cases of ciguatera
poisoning in Hong Kong. Sadovy (1999) also cited a case where 10 tonnes of contaminated
fish from Fiji were imported into Hong Kong. Health authorities prevented the sale of the fish
to the public but the fish were re-exported to Mainland China.
Stewart (1999) reported an outbreak of ciguatera poisoning, which prompted some people in
Hong Kong to call for the banning of the sale of live reef fish for consumption. Thirty people,
aged two to 80, were struck down with fevers, vomiting, chills, sweat, muscle fatigue and
numbness. Stewart explained that in the previous year there was 420 ciguatera victims in 117
separate cases. Larger fish are thought to contain higher concentrations of ciguatoxins, as the
toxins are believed to accumulate with the passage of time. Sadovy (1999) noted that the
growing frequency of these outbreaks prompted health authority warnings suggesting the
consumption of smaller fish was preferable. This has resulted in dampened demand and
deflated prices for larger specimens but, concomitantly, a greater proportion of juveniles
being sold in retail outlets, which does not augur well for the long-term health of these
fisheries.
2.3 Intensive Fishing in Spawning Aggregations
The LRFFT in the South Pacific has largely been devoid of the types of destructive fishing
methods that accompanied the trade in Indonesia and the Philippines. However, intensive
fishing effort, concentrated on seasonal spawning aggregations, has a devastating effect on
recruitment of juveniles of the target species to the fishery in subsequent years. Johannes et al.
(1999) suggested that the effect of such fishing on spawning aggregations could lead to the
collapse and local extinction of the aggregations. The aggregations may take years to recover
due to problems within the spawning aggregation when the sex ratio is not conducive to
optimal spawning behaviour. In some cases, the aggregations do not recover at all. As village
communities have fished these aggregations for generations for subsistence, there is an urgent
need to the address the unsustainable commercial exploitation of these resources.
The value of the LRFFT, in combination with the paucity of alternative sources of income,
has made the trade an attractive proposition to village fishers. The trade contributes
23
significantly to the local and central economies of participating nations, but there is concern
about the impact on local ecosystems and long-term sustainability (Hamilton and Walter,
1999). The effect of exploitation of reef fish, on this scale, is not necessarily well known to
most subsistence fishers and traditional reef owners. The activities on fishing grounds have,
consequently, been focused on the vigorous exploitation of the spawning aggregations. The
timing and location, extent and duration of such aggregations is well known among fishing
communities, and the speed with which fishers are able to earn a relatively large sum of
money from fishing has encouraged many fishers to join the trade, thereby intensifying the
pressure on spawning aggregations.
In Australia, the LRFFT is practiced in what is currently believed to be a sustainable manner.
Entry in to the fishery is restricted and fishers do not, by their own volition, target spawning
aggregations. Clearly, there is a greater injection of capital into live reef fish operations in
Australia. There is greater access to research findings regarding the target species and current
management strategies from around the world. Efficient handling, storage and transport
techniques and arrangements have resulted in negligible post harvest mortality. The ease of
access to information needs has resulted in fishers making informed decisions with regard to
exploiting the resource for which they have permitted rights to access commercially.
2.3.1 Spawning Behaviour of Reef Fish
Many species aggregate to spawn. Domeier and Colin (1997 p.699) broadly defined a
spawning aggregation as “a gathering of conspecific fish, for the purposes of spawning, that
consists of fish densities significantly higher (greater than or equal to a three-fold increase)
than are found during the non-reproductive period”. Many marine fishes aggregate to spawn
according to a regime of environmental parameters (Johannes 1978; Colin et al. 1987;
Shapiro 1987). Spawning occurs in well-defined aggregation sites. Some fish travel many
kilometres from their home site to attend. The aggregations often take place at specific times
of day and at specific times in the lunar or tidal cycle and at recurring seasons every year. The
occurrence of spawning aggregations is, consequently, highly predictable (Sadovy, 1996).
It is uncertain why species aggregate to spawn. It is thought that the timing and location of
aggregations is to benefit egg dispersal and aid larvae in finding food and avoiding predation
(e.g. Doherty et al., 1985). However, Colin (1992) suggested that there is no dispersal
advantage gained from using a specific site and time to spawn. Boulert (1996) stated that
spawning sites are often located on down-current sides of reefs, promoting transport off the
24
reef, if not out of the reef system as a whole. Complex socio-behavioural structure is
associated with spawning aggregations (Zabala et al., 1997). Territoriality and a ritual, phased
arrival and departure from aggregations, occur frequently. The actual timing of egg
fertilisation within a spawning aggregation may constitute only a small percentage of the time
that the species aggregate.
Female groupers characteristically outnumber males in aggregations (Zabala et al., 1997).
However, this is generally at the peak of the aggregation when the actual spawning activity is
at the optimum level. Upon arrival at an aggregation site, male groupers aggressively establish
territory (Zabala et al., 1997; Johannes et al., 1999). Female groupers arrive several days after
the males and typically, several females attend each male. In a heavily fished passage in
Palau, however, Johannes et al. (1999) found that male Plectropomus areolatus,
uncharacteristically, outnumbered females 5:1. The courting behaviour of males included
harassment of females by several males at once, which sometimes resulted in females leaving
the aggregation site without releasing gametes. This contrasts with the courting behaviour of
males in a lightly fished passage in the same study, where females outnumbered males and
there was no such harassment. Johannes (1989) recorded the same orderly behaviour of males
within a spawning aggregation in Solomon Islands where the sex ratio was skewed in favour
of females.
Sadovy (1996) pointed out that there is a clear link between a reduction in the adult
population from heavy fishing pressure and declines in subsequent recruitment if the adult
biomass falls below critical levels. Local demographic conditions are believed to influence the
stage of development at which sex change occurs in fish. Shapiro et al. (1993) suggested that
female Epinephelus guttatus evaluated future reproductive success, and the best time to
change sex, from information that would only be available within a spawning aggregation. A
decrease in males would result in some females changing sex to compensate for the shortfall
of reproductive potential. Sadovy (1996) stated that the factors that induce sex change – either
behaviour, sex ratio or relative size (or a combination of these factors) – have been implicated
in the inducement of sex change, but never absolute size or age. These adaptive characteristics
must be seen as a mechanism of homeostasis, whereby equilibrium is maintained against
normal background variation in the sex ratio. The removal of large (male) groupers and coral
trout for the LRFFT is a shock event and cannot be compensated for, in the short term, by
such behavioural adaptation.
25
Spawning aggregations of P. areolatus, Epinephelus polyphekadion and Epinephelus
fuscoguttatus tend to overlap in time and space. Intensive fishing pressure during spawning
aggregations of these species risks serious depletion of current stocks, lower participation in
subsequent spawning aggregations, and reduced egg output from aggregations, now and in the
future. These fish display a high degree of fidelity to particular spawning aggregation sites.
Females may return to spawn at a particular site more than once in a spawning season and
males often return on numerous occasions. Female P. areolatus travel in schools for periods
before reaching and after leaving spawning aggregations, possibly as a means of minimising
predation (Johannes et al., 1999). However, fishers exploit knowledge of behaviour and
ecology, such as cyclical rhythms and migration behaviour, to maximise their catch and/or to
minimise their effort (Parrish, 1999). Targeting of female schools heading to or from
spawning aggregations could be an important source of mortality that contributes to a low
female:male ratio, thereby disrupting reproduction of P. areolatus within the aggregation
(Johannes et al., 1999).
Spawning behaviour of Plectropomus leopardus on the Great Barrier Reef, observed by Zeller
(1998), indicated that the aggregations were small and comprised several sites within a small
geographic range. Individual sites were found to be vulnerable to increased fishing pressure.
Samoilys (1997) concurred but added that the spatial and temporal predictability made the
sites amenable to specialised management such as spatial or temporal closures. Zeller (1998)
found that males spent an average of eight times as long at aggregation sites as females and
made several times as many trips to those sites. Consequently, males were considered more
vulnerable than females to fishing. Samoilys and Squire (1994) stated that P. leopardus
spawned only in pairs and found that spawning in the aggregations occurred only for a short
period at sunset. The greater vulnerability of males and the paired spawning behaviour may
increase the potential for sperm limitation in the aggregations of this species.
Disrupting normal reproductive behaviour may have a significant impact on successful
spawning and subsequent stock replenishment. The effects of fishing spawning aggregations
will depend on whether this is the only or primary avenue of reproduction for a species, and
the proportion of individuals that frequent the particular spawning sites being fished
(Samoilys and Donnelly, 2001). Tropical Atlantic or Caribbean groupers such as E. guttatus,
E. striatus and the Mycteroperca spp. appear to rely totally on short-lived spawning
aggregations which involve hundreds, sometimes thousands of individuals (Domeier and
Colin, 1997). It appears that the Pacific coral trout P. areolatus may employ a similar strategy
(Johannes et al., 1999).
26
Export of live P. leopardus from Solomon Islands is currently at a low level as the LRFFT is
practiced in regions where deepwater passages dissect barrier islands and link lagoons to the
open sea, and these commonly form the spawning aggregation sites for the three main species,
P. areolatus, E. polyphekadion and E. fuscoguttatus. However, P. leopardus is a dominant
species in the live fish markets in Hong Kong and it can be expected that the LRFFT will
expand to areas of the Solomon Islands that feature the patch reef habitat favoured by this
species for spawning.
2.3.2 The Impacts of Fishing Spawning Aggregations
Whilst aggregating fishes provide a valuable management opportunity, they are particularly
vulnerable to overfishing because of the predictability of the time and location of the
aggregations (Johannes, 1981; Bohnsack 1989a; Samoilys 1997). Targeted fishing of
spawning aggregations has been documented in Palau (Johannes 1981), Puerto Rico, Virgin
Islands, St Croix and Belize (Sadovy et al. 1994) and the collapse of grouper fisheries in these
countries has been attributed to this practice (Bohnsack 1989b; Johannes et al. 1994).
Notably, the plight of these fisheries has been illustrated by the disappearance of, or alarming
reduction in, spawning aggregations.
Most species that are exploited for the LRFFT are serranids that aggregate to spawn, and are
protogynous hermaphrodites (Shapiro, 1987; Sadovy, 1996; Johannes and Riepen, 1995;
Donnelly et al., 2000). That is, they start life as females and change into males when older
and larger. Consequently, population sex ratios are typically female biased (there are more
young individuals in a population). These biological characteristics are particularly relevant to
the impacts of the LRFFT on stock sustainability (Samoilys and Donnelly, 2001).
Sadovy (1996) stated that intensive fishing effort that focuses on spawning aggregations may
alter the structure of the aggregation, whereby spawning behaviour is disrupted, resulting in a
reduction of reproductive output. The long-term effects of intensive aggregation fishing are
largely unknown. Johannes et al. (1999) described the short-term effects of such fishing as a
sudden drastic decline in fish abundance and cited reports of disappearing spawning
aggregations of grouper throughout the Caribbean Sea. Targeting spawning aggregations in
this way can increase the likelihood of localised removal of species that may constitute a
significant component of dietary protein for local people. The aggregating behaviour of many
reef species has been a focal point for artisanal fishers. Parrish (1999) noted that fishers
27
capitalise on experiential knowledge of fish behaviour and ecology by following recurring
environmental signals. In this way, provision of food is more easily ensured.
Fishing of spawning aggregations may have adverse effects for the population structure and
reproductive potential of the target species. Jennings and Lock (1996) noted that about 50
spawning aggregation sites for the Nassau grouper, Epinephelus striata, are known in the
Caribbean. However, one third of these aggregations no longer form due to heavy fishing
pressure. Beets and Friedlander (1999) found two grouper spawning aggregations that were
eliminated by intensive fishing. Species within another intensively targeted aggregation
recorded a dramatic size decrease, while the sex ratio was highly skewed to 15 females to one
male, which indicated the potential for sperm limitation in the aggregation. Overfishing has
been implicated in the disappearance of spawning aggregations throughout the world (e.g.
Colin, 1992; Aquilar-Perera and Aguilar-Davila, 1996; Domeier and Colin, 1997). Johannes
et al. (1999) listed five locations where grouper stocks had been eliminated as a result of
fishing spawning aggregations.
2.3.3 Biological Consequences of Fishing Spawning Aggregations
Fishing in spawning aggregations can affect population structure to an extent that limits the
successful reproduction of the targeted species. Table 2.1 outlines the typical effects and the
possible management responses to minimise the effects of fishing spawning aggregations.
Table 2.1. The main effects of fishing spawning aggregations on the targeted species.
Effect Response
Removal of
gravid females
• Can be limited by using a minimum size limit, set above the size at first maturity. This is
employed to allow fish to spawn at least once; and as a safeguard against “recruitment
overfishing” (Russ, 1991), which occurs when a population is fished beyond the level at
which adequate recruitment of young can sustain the population. This is closely tied to
maintaining adequate numbers of reproductive individuals, termed the spawning stock.
• A maximum size limit may also be set to protect those individuals that are most fecund,
thereby enhancing reproductive rate. In the absence of specific fishery regulations,
removal of gravid individuals by fishing spawning aggregations is likely to be a serious
concern because the numbers removed can approach critical levels in terms of reducing
spawning stock biomass (Samoilys and Donnelly, 2001).
• Closure of fishing spawning aggregations during periods of peak spawning activity will
minimise the removal of gravid individuals from the local population and, consequently,
will also minimise the reduction of spawning stock biomass.
28
Reduction of
average fish
size/age
• The decline in average fish size or age is a response to fishing pressure caused by gear
selectivity for larger individuals. The implications of this decline are two-fold:
1. Reduced size of females will reduce overall fecundity in the population since
fecundity is strongly related to size.
2. In the case of protogynous hermaphrodites, such as most groupers, reduced size and
age of females may indicate females are changing sex earlier, which can affect the
sex ratio of the population and the spawning potential of males.
• A consequence of removal of males from the population. May be thwarted by adoption of
maximum size limits and/or temporal closures of aggregation sites to all fishing.
Reduction in
male:female
sex ratio
• Caused by selectively fishing one sex more than the other. As the males of protogynous
hermaphrodites are removed by fishing because they are larger, females change sex
earlier in compensation, to offset the change in sex ratio (Coleman et al., 1996; Vincent
and Sadovy, 1998).
• This could lead to a reduction in the average size/age of males, which may affect their
spawning potential. For example, they may be less able to establish matings in
aggregations.
• If sperm limitation (lack of males) ensues from reduced numbers of males, or less fecund
males, the spawning potential of females will also be reduced.
Adapted from Samoilys and Donnelly (2001)
The outcomes described in Table 2.2 could be expected from such effects associated with
fishing in grouper spawning aggregations:
Table 2.2. The main outcomes of fishing spawning aggregations on the targeted species.
Outcomes Description
Reduced population
fecundity
• Aggregation fishing can reduce fecundity by removing reproductively active
individuals. The fecundity of a population is closely linked to recruitment, and
hence stock productivity (Cushing, 1996).
• Since fecundity increases exponentially with fish size (Roff, 1992), maximum size
limits are particularly designed to protect the most fecund fish. Targeting spawning
aggregations directly impacts on the potential fecundity of the population.
• In the absence of resources to adequately measure total annual fecundity, the
precautionary measure best suited to maintenance of stock productivity is closure of
spawning aggregation sites during the peak spawning period.
Decreased effective • Populations can sustain a certain level of fishing mortality. However, it is the
29
population size effective population size i.e. the number of mature individuals, which are defined as
the number of individuals known, estimated or inferred to be capable of
reproduction, which is important for functional integrity of the spawning
aggregation (IUCN, 2001). Therefore, if fishing removes individuals in such a way
that the remaining mature individuals are unable to spawn then the effective
population size is smaller than the total number of mature fish present.
• If fishing heavily targets spawning aggregations they may fail to function due to the
disruption of social behaviour, generally through removal of dominant males. If
successful spawning depends on a threshold number of individuals being present in
an aggregation, for example a requisite number of males, then depletion of fish in an
aggregation below that threshold is likely to prevent spawning (IUCN, 2001).
• Although a certain number of individuals may still be present in the population as a
whole (assessed perhaps through Underwater Visual Census surveys), those
necessary for each spawning aggregation are no longer present and therefore the net
effective population size for successful reproduction is severely reduced.
Reduced population
growth
• Failed spawning opportunities through disrupting spawning behaviour may lead to
large scale reproductive failure causing reduced population growth (Coleman et al.,
1996).
• In the case of groupers, reducing the spawning population below a threshold level
may dramatically limit recruitment and the stock may collapse. However, it is
precautionary from a fisheries management perspective, to assume that they will
occur and to manage accordingly.
• Assessment of spawning populations using Underwater Visual Census surveys
allows fisheries officers to monitor the effective population size and to advise
traditional resource owners with regard to the impact of fishing effort.
Adapted from Samoilys and Donnelly (2001)
30
Chapter 3: The LRFFT in Solomon Islands
3.1 Solomon Islands Background
The Solomon Islands form an archipelago in the southwest Pacific about 1,900 kms northeast
of Australia. The terrain ranges from rugged, mountainous islands to low-lying coral atolls.
The Solomons stretch in a 1,450km chain southeast from Papua New Guinea across the Coral
Sea to Vanuatu (Figure 3.1). The islands of Choiseul, New Georgia, Santa Isabel,
Guadalcanal, Malaita, and Makira have forested mountain ranges of mainly volcanic origin,
deep narrow valleys, and coastal belts ringed by reefs. The smaller islands are atolls and
raised coral reefs. In all, there are 992 islands, 347 of which are inhabited (US State Dept.,
1999). Solomon Islands share marine boundaries with France (New Caledonia), Vanuatu,
Papua New Guinea and Australia. Maritime boundary agreements have been negotiated with
Australia, France and Papua New Guinea. The agreement with Papua New Guinea entered
into force on 14 January 1998. The boundary with Vanuatu has been agreed in principle.
3.1.1 People
Solomon Islanders comprise diverse cultures, languages, and customs. The population in 1999
was 409,042 (Kudu, 2001). Melanesians comprise 93.3 per cent of the population, while four
per cent are Polynesian and 1.5 per cent Micronesian. In addition, there are small numbers of
Europeans and Chinese. The origin of the present Melanesian inhabitants is uncertain,
although archaeological and linguistic evidence indicates that Solomon Islands was probably
settled 4,000-5,000 years ago by Austronesian, Neolithic people from southeast Asia, who
were characterised by the manufacture of distinctively stamped and incised pottery known as
Lapita (named from an excavation site in New Caledonia) (Dalzell and Adams, 1996). The
first documented European contact was made in 1568 by the Spanish explorer, Alvaro de
Mendaña. Mendaña discovered alluvial gold on Guadalcanal and, perhaps thinking he found
the source of King Solomon’s mine, named the islands the “Isles of Solomon”.
31
Figure 3.1. Solomon Islands featuring the three areas that hosted the LRFFT.
Literacy in Solomon Islands is poor compared with other Pacific countries, particularly
among women (Fono, 1999). There is limited access to secondary education (AusAid, 2000)
due mostly to transport constraints. Ninety seven per cent of children attended primary school
in 1995, but only 17 per cent attended secondary school (US State Dept., 1999). While
Solomon Islands Pijin is the lingua franca, English is widely spoken and there are about 87
local languages spoken. Some 86 per cent of the people rely on subsistence agriculture and
fishing. They reside in rural villages that generally have poor access to services and
infrastructure (ADB, 1998). Kudu (2001) reported the average household size to be 6.3
persons. Malaita, Guadalcanal, and Western provinces accounted for more than two thirds of
the rural population. Solomon Islanders are a maritime people with a high consumption of
seafood. A 1992 survey of household consumption in Honiara reported an estimated annual
per capita consumption of seafood of 45.5kg.
3.1.2 Settlement Pattern
Most people reside in small, widely dispersed settlements. Sixty percent live in localities with
fewer than 200 persons, and 15.6 per cent reside in urban areas, a figure that is increasing.
Most of the country’s villages are situated on, or very near to, the coast, and about one third
are “bush villages” with no direct access to the coast (ADB, 1998). The villages are mostly
very small. The Ministry of Finance (1997) reported the national average village population to
32
be 71, ranging from 47 in Choiseul to 111 in Western Province. Modal village population was
20 to 49 persons; only three villages had more than 1,000 inhabitants.
The capital city of Honiara, situated on Guadalcanal, has about 50,000 inhabitants. The other
principal towns are Gizo (Western), Auki (Malaita), and Kirakira (Makira). At the end of
World War II, the capital was moved from Tulagi, in Central Province, to Honiara to take
advantage of the infrastructure left behind by the U.S. military, including Henderson Field,
the site of the current international airport. In 1960, the legislative council superseded an
advisory council of Solomon Islanders, and an executive council was created as the
protectorate’s policymaking body. The council was given progressively more authority until,
in 1974, a new constitution was adopted establishing a parliamentary democracy and
ministerial system of government. In mid 1975, the name Solomon Islands officially replaced
that of British Solomon Islands Protectorate. On 2nd January 1976, the Solomons became self-
governing, and independence followed on 7th July 1978.
As in almost all Pacific Island societies, Solomon Islands consists mostly of a traditional
system of marine tenure, and this usually involves ownership of reefs and lagoons, and
sometimes a substantial portion of open ocean, by a matrix of relatively small social units
(Adams, 1998). This system is discussed in greater detail in Chapter 6, with particular
reference to Marovo Lagoon, Roviana Lagoon and Ontong Java.
3.1.3 Economy
Since gaining independence in 1978, debt has been a distinguishing characteristic of the
Solomon Islands economy. Recurring budget deficits made it increasingly difficult for the
local private sector to access domestic credit, thereby opening the door for foreign investors to
exploit the nation’s natural resources – initially forestry resources then later, the substantial
tuna resource. Until 1998, when world prices for tropical timber fell steeply, timber was
Solomon Islands’ main export product, and in recent years, the nation’s forests have been
dangerously overexploited.
There is a reliance on imports for many basic commodities. Imports are financed on a narrow
base of exports (mostly timber and fish). The potential flow-on effects of unsustainable
exploitation of this export base emphasise the importance of a cautious management
approach. Solomon Islands has a large public sector and a poorly developed private sector.
Manufacturing and tourism are poorly developed and the country relies heavily on foreign
33
aid, primarily from Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Taiwan and multilateral organisations
such as the Asian Development Bank, the European Union and others.
The former Interim Prime Minister, Mr Sogavare, admitted that since Independence,
successive governments had not designed a budget to seriously address rural development and
that governments must now redirect their thinking to focus on this issue. Mr Sogavare said
that over the years, projects were developed with the hope that benefits will trickle down to
the people in rural areas, which had not been the case. He said that he hoped that the new state
government system might encourage rural development (SIBC News, 7th and 10th September
2001).
3.1.4 Contemporary Political Climate
In addition to the nation’s development challenges, Solomon Islands has been beset by ethnic
tensions, which reached crisis point in mid 1999. The source of the tensions is deeply rooted
in indigenous custom and culture, with economic, social and political factors all involved.
Around 20,000 Malaitans from rural Guadalcanal were displaced from their homes and
moved back to Malaita Province by a militia group called the Isatabu Freedom Movement. In
response, a Malaitan militant group became active. Following this group’s takeover of key
installations in Honiara in June 2000, law and order deteriorated, particularly on Guadalcanal.
The then Prime Minister, Bartholomew Ulufa’alu, was forced to resign under duress, and
Parliament chose a new Prime Minister, Manasseh Sogavare. A new government, known as
the Coalition for National Unity, Reconciliation, and Peace, was formed. Solomon Islands
society and economy were massively disrupted. Major export industries closed down,
government revenues plummeted and government services were severely curtailed. In
October 2000, after months of tension and violence, the rival militia groups signed an
agreement with the Solomon Islands Government to disarm and work towards a peaceful
resolution of issues of land ownership and compensation (U.S. Department of State, 2001). In
December 2001, general elections were conducted, in the presence of international monitors,
and a new government was formed under the leadership of former Deputy Prime Minister, Sir
Alan Kemakeza.
3.1.5 Population Pressure
Population pressure is an important factor in terms of providing food for a predominantly
rural society from a resource base that is threatened with overexploitation from commercial
interests. The population of the Pacific island region has grown steadily at around 2.2 per cent
34
each year. Pacific life is still primarily rural. However, if current trends continue, the Pacific
islands’ population will reach the 10 million mark by about 2010, with the fastest growth
occurring in towns and cities (UNDP, 1996). Given the magnitude of population
developments in the region and their social, economic and political implications,
consideration of both population dynamics and development must form an integral component
of policy formulation. Solomon Islands responded to this situation by embarking on an
economic policy and structural reform strategy. The underpinning principle of the strategy is
that developmental initiatives will be population focused (Fono, 1999).
3.1.6 Population Dynamics
In Solomon Islands, the average annual population increase was less than one per cent in the
1950s and 2.4 per cent in the 1960s. It was around 3.5 per cent until the mid 1980s but has
currently stabilised at 2.8 per cent. The population has risen by more than 150 per cent since
1970 to the most recent census in 1999 (see Table 3.1). The high population growth, coupled
with the high proportion of Solomon Islanders under the age of 15 (40 percent), suggests a
continuous expansion in the labour force. It is therefore likely that unemployment will be
heavily concentrated on the young. The rate of economic growth has not been able to keep up
with the rate of population growth. Consequently, it is almost certain that a very large
proportion of the future labour force entrants must continue to seek employment in the
subsistence sector and semi-subsistence sector. The current number of people involved in paid
work is 57,472 (23 percent of the population aged 14 years and over). Unemployment among
the young is very high, with about 28,000 looking for paid employment at the time of the
census. Over the next 10 years the number of young people entering the labour market will be
close to 100,000 (Kudu, 2001).
Table 3.1. Population by province from 1970 to 1999.
Province 1970 1976 1986 1999
No. % tot. No. % tot. No. % tot. No. % tot.
Choiseul 8,017 4.98 10,349 5.26 13,569 4.76 20,008 4.89
Western 24,214 15.04 29,980 15.23 41,681 14.62 62,739 15.34
Isabel 8,653 5.37 10,420 5.29 14,616 5.13 20,421 4.99
Central 9,418 5.85 11,683 5.94 16,655 5.84 21,577 5.28
Rennell/Bellona 1,504 0.93 1,893 0.96 1,802 0.63 2,377 0.58
Guadalcanal 23,996 14.90 31,677 16.09 49,831 17.47 60,275 14.74
35
Malaita 51,722 32.13 60,043 30.51 80,032 28.06 122,620 29.98
Makira 12,390 7.70 14,891 7.57 21,796 7.64 31,006 7.58
Temotu 9,078 5.64 10,945 5.56 14,781 5.18 18,912 4.62
Honiara 12,006 7.46 14,942 7.59 30,413 10.66 49,107 12.01
TOTAL 160,998 100 196,823 100 285,176 100 409,042 100
Source: Solomon Islands Census Report, 2000.
3.1.7 Urban Migration
The average annual population growth in Honiara from 1976-1986 was 6.8 per cent. It has
since stabilised, but the current figure of 3.8 per cent does not reflect typical growth because
of the effects of displacement. Notwithstanding this, the population of the capital has more
than tripled since 1970. As a result of the ethnic tension, the population growth rate of
Malaita, which used to be the lowest of all provinces, has now become the highest with 3.3
percent per year. In comparison, the population growth rate of Guadalcanal is, with 1.5
percent per year, now far below the national average of 2.8 percent (Kudu, 2001). Migration
to urban areas places pressure on infrastructure, increasing the demand for water, sanitation,
housing, and education and health services. More importantly, perhaps, is the possible decline
in the cultural identification of a maritime people with the sea. It raises the question of why
people are leaving the villages and moving to urban areas. Is the demand for consumer goods,
utilities and services characteristic of Western society stronger than the desire to perpetuate
the traditional way of life, or are resources in decline in the rural areas such that people are
unable to meet cash needs for schooling, transport and basic commodities? A combination of
factors seems likely. Importantly, commercial exploitation of inshore resources must be
managed in a manner that generates income but does not deplete the resource itself and
exacerbate the flux of people to urban areas.
3.1.8 Religion
Christianity was brought to Solomon Islands in the 19th and early 20th centuries by
missionaries representing several Western churches: Anglican; Roman Catholic; South Seas
Evangelical; Seventh-day Adventist; and the London Missionary Society, which later became
the United Church (US State Dept, 2000). Most citizens of Solomon Islands are members of
Christian churches. Traditional indigenous religious believers, consisting primarily of the
Kwaio community on the island of Malaita, account for approximately five per cent of the
Solomon Islands population. Other groups, such as the Baha’i Faith, Jehovah’s Witnesses, the
36
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, and indigenous churches that have broken away
from traditional Christian churches, account for another two per cent of the Solomon Islands
population. The doctrines of the church retain great influence in the lives of Solomon
Islanders. In a country that is overwhelmingly rural, the church plays a central role in many
village activities, ranging from schools, community groups, utilities and clinics to addressing
issues such as health and equality, religious values and community cohesion.
3.1.9 Fishing Activity
There is a well-established industrial tuna fishery in Solomon Islands. Solomon Taiyo, a joint
venture between the government and a Japanese company was established in 1973. ADB
(1994) reported that the company registered a profit only twice in the first 20 years of
operation. However, the most consistent and valuable indirect benefit of the venture was the
provision of wage employment for over 2,000 Solomon Islanders. Rural communities also
benefited from the disbursement of funds through baitfish royalty payments. The Taiyo
company withdrew from the venture due to incidents arising from the ethnic tension in late
July 2000 (Pasifik Nius, 2000). In late September 2000, the national broadcaster reported that
Taiwan would be allowed to send 42 tuna fishing boats into Solomon Island’s waters for a
year at US$8,000 per boat, a dramatic decline from the US$150,000 per boat per year
demanded by the Ulufa’alu government in mid 1999 (Radio Australia, 2000).
Most fishing, however, is for subsistence purposes, with the majority of production consumed
within the fisher’s family groups. Only relatively small amounts of fish enter the cash
economy. The Asian Development Bank (1994) estimated that subsistence and artisanal
fisheries take 11,150t of reef and lagoon fish annually, and that around 90% of this catch
(10,000t) is used for subsistence consumption. Small-scale fishers in Isabel and Malaita
Provinces provide about 75% of the fresh fish marketed in Honiara. Although Ontong Java
forms part of Malaita Province, there is no domestic marketing of finfish from the atoll. The
majority of fishing in the village sector still takes place from small dugout canoes, which are
used as a platform for droplining, trolling and netting. Other methods include hand spear
fishing and beach seining. A suite of “custom” methods is also used involving large groups of
people and sometimes incorporating natural toxic materials to stun the fish. Traditional
fishing gear is still in use in some areas, although modern gear and methods are increasingly
utilised (ADB, 1994).
37
Boape (1999) reported that small-scale commercial fisheries are only poorly or moderately
developed in Solomon Islands. There is some small-scale, semi-commercial fishing in areas
with access to cash markets, principally the market in Honiara, but this is much less extensive
in areas that are remote from urban or semi-urban markets. Intermediaries or fish traders
usually transport fish intended for sale to market by inter-island vessels. Insulated fish boxes
and ice are used during transport to Honiara. Market facilities are rudimentary. Fish is usually
sold straight from the fish boxes or open baskets or simply laid out in the open air. The
Honiara municipal market provides facilities where fishers can sell fish from their fish boxes
in a shaded area close to the sea front.
During the 1980s, more than 25 rural fishery centres were established to stimulate commercial
fishing activity in selected areas, under the Rural Fishing Enterprise Project, funded by the
European Union. The centres provided ice, and fish landing and storage facilities. However,
many of the centres have subsequently ceased to operate. When the project closed in 1998,
none of the centres could pay for the repair and maintenance of the ice plants, generators etc.
Under the latest phase of the project, which commenced in late 1999, each fisheries centre
must be financially independent from other centres, and they have to survive without subsidy.
The general concept is to achieve sustainability through private ownership of the centres by
the communities who use them. As part of this process, the centres aim to diversify,
particularly into activities that involve women. These activities include seaweed and coral
farming, aquarium fish and holding fish for the LRFFT (R. Stewart, pers. comm.).
In rural and distant outer-island areas, the production of trochus shell, bêche-de-mer and shark
fin has traditionally been more important to the small-scale sector than fishing for cash
income. Since these products are not perishable, they can be harvested and stocked without
the need for refrigeration. They command relatively high prices and the private sector has put
in place effective marketing and distribution chains for these profitable and relatively easy-to-
handle commodities. The export market is lucrative but the resources risk overexploitation as
a result of the intense commercial interest (Boape, 1999).
The growing cash dependence of rural communities made the LRFFT an attractive
commercial opportunity for village fishers in Solomon Islands. LRFFT practices in Solomon
Islands have involved intensive fishing effort, concentrated on seasonal spawning
aggregations. The effect of such fishing on spawning aggregations could lead to the collapse
and local extinction of the aggregations (Johannes et al., 1999). As village communities have
38
fished these aggregations for generations for subsistence, there is an urgent need to address
the unsustainable commercial exploitation of these resources.
3.2 Development of the LRFFT in Solomon Islands
3.2.1 Origins
An Australian invested in a Hong Kong-backed company called Ika Holdings, which started
the LRFFT in Solomon Islands, in 1994, at Vella La Vella Lagoon in Western Province
(Johannes, 1999). The company initially fished throughout the year but this proved not to be
viable. This was largely due to substantial post-harvest losses from poor handling, storage and
transportation of live fish. Pulse fishing, targeting seasonal grouper spawning aggregations
was adopted, first in Marovo Lagoon then in Roviana Lagoon. Smith (1999) noted that Ika
Holdings closed down in 1997, as a result of the Asian economic crisis, but the same people
started a new company called Asia Pacific Imports and Exports Company Ltd, owned by three
Solomon Islanders and one Australian. This company expanded the LRFFT operation to
include the remote northern atoll of Ontong Java (Figure 3.1). In Solomon Islands and other
areas of the South Pacific, the primary concern is the elimination of large spawning
aggregations of groupers, which have sustained coastal villagers for centuries, through
intensive targeting by hook-and-line fishing for the LRFFT.
Concern about the LRFFT in Solomon Islands arose in November 1997, when a foreign
investor surveyed Isabel Province for possible fishing grounds (ACIAR, 1999). The company
was issued with a license to buy a variety of marine resources from local reef owners,
including live fish (Smith, 1999). However, the vessel carried equipment consistent with that
found on-board cyanide fishing vessels in Indonesia and the Philippines. In response to
complaints from the Arnavon Marine Conservation Area Management Committee, advice was
sought, by the Solomon Islands government, from a leading tropical fisheries consultant,
which later resulted in a moratorium imposed on all new live fish export licenses, on the 6th
February 1999. The moratorium constituted “special consideration” under Section 7(5) of the
Fisheries Act 1998 (see Chapter 8), necessitating the development of a management plan for
the fishery.
Activities in the LRFFT, however, were not regularly monitored, principally because of a lack
of resources in the Solomon Islands Fisheries Division (SIFD). This resulted in a poor
understanding of the status of the fishery. This paucity of resources is exemplified by the fact
that the LRFFT was in operation for two years before SIFD became aware of it. This serves
39
also to highlight the disconnectedness that exists between government officials in Honiara and
activities in remote villages in outlying provinces. A preliminary assessment of the trade was
finally undertaken in December 1997. Problems identified included under-valuation of live
fish, under-payment for live fish, biased weighing and under-reporting of the amount of fish
exported. Primarily, fishing during spawning aggregations was the catalyst for immediate
action to develop a strategy to manage the LRFFT in Solomon Islands (ACIAR, 1999).
3.2.2 Dynamics of the LRFFT in Solomon Islands
Initially, live fish were caught by local fishers and then stored in floating holding pens, which
were usually owned by the company, but overseen by a local villager. Twice a month, the
company vessel, the John Franklin, collected the fish and transported them to the company
facilities at Liapari in Vella La Vella. The fish were then held until a quantity was collected
that was sufficient to justify ordering a large LFTV from Hong Kong to collect them,
typically 30t (Johannes, 1999).
The important food fish target species in Solomon Islands are the square-tailed coral trout
(Plectropomus areolatus), camouflage grouper (Epinephelus polyphekadion) and the flowery
grouper (E. fuscoguttatus). All three species aggregate to spawn in overlapping locations,
seasons and moon phases, but the timing of these aggregations varies among the three regions
where the trade was practiced. Another important species is the leopard coral trout (P.
leopardus). Aggregations of these species, however, are smaller and more scattered. The
beginning and end of the spawning season varies by about a month from one year to another,
so fishers stored their live catch in holding pens prior to the arrival of the LRFFT operator.
Live fish were bought from local fishers by the company at a price of SI$5.50 per kg in 1997.
In 1997, the total LRFF export was 33 tonnes see Table 3.2).
Table 3.2. Total LRFFT export in 1997.
Date Exported/Amount Exported (kg)
Mar. 2 May 24 Sept. 7 Sept l0 Total
Flowery grouper
Epinephelus fuscoguttatus
6,500
5,700
3,000
2,500
17,700
Camouflage grouper
Epinephelus polyphekadion
2,000
3,000
500
2,000
7,500
Coral trout
Mainly Plectropomus areolatus
2,000
2,500
400
2,000
6,900
40
Humphead (Maori) wrasse
Cheilinus undulatus
500
300
100
0
900
Total 11,000 11,500 4,000 6,500 33,000
Source: Solomon Islands Fisheries Division (unpublished).
The fish spawning seasons are distinct from region to region in Solomon Islands (Johannes,
1999). In Marovo Lagoon, the peak spawning season is from February through June; in
Ontong Java, the company operated from June until September; and in Roviana Lagoon, the
season is roughly from October through January. In this regard, the company was able to
operate all year and still able to target seasonal spawning aggregations.
The method of fishing for the LRFFT was hook and line and this was done from canoes.
Normally, a company employee would go around the area in a boat waiting to purchase the
fish from fishers. The operator established floating cage stations in nearby areas where they
purchased the fish. The fish were held in the cages until there were sufficient to notify Hong
Kong buyers to send a live fish vessel to collect them. Twice a month, during the fishing
season, the company vessel would tour the lagoon to pick up the live fish. The extent of the
live fish catch in the three regions where the trade operated is shown in Table 3.3.
Table 3.3. Live fish purchased by Ika Holdings in the Solomon Islands, 1996 - 1998.
Region 1996 1997 1998 TOTAL
(kg) (kg) (kg) (kg)
Marovo Lagoon
Telina 12,585 11,668 8,459 32,712
Vacambo 7,660 5,968 5,886 19,514
Uepi (Charapoana) 5,014 6,800 8,666 20,480
Ketoketo 43 6,874 4,823 11,740
Tamaneke 2,646 2,646
Ramata 3,036 3,036
Mbili Passage 3,469 3,469
Total 25,302 33,956 34,339 93,597
Roviana Lagoon
Sasavelle 6,529 3,368 9,897
Hapai 5,130 5,130
41
Nusahope 1,067 1,067
Total 6,529 9,564 16,093
Ontong Java
Kemalu (base) 11,071 11,071
Sunset (near Pelau) 6,594 6,594
OJ (Luaniua) 2,461 2,461
Total 20,125 20,125
TOTAL 31,831 43,520 54,464 129,815
Source: Johannes (1999)
Company purchase records (Table 3.3) are roughly comparable with those that Johannes
(1999) extrapolated from village royalty figures obtained during his preliminary assessment of
the fishery. Judging by the figures, Johannes (1999) concluded that single aggregations
yielded four to eight tonnes of fish per year. Fishers pointed out that these are underestimates
because of the many fish that died before they could be sold to the company. In addition, they
indicate that the Lumalihe Passage aggregation (fished by villagers from Telina in Marovo
Lagoon) yielded the largest catches - around 12 tonnes in l996 and l997, falling to less than
8.5 tonnes in l998.
3.2.3 Moratorium
The interim moratorium on the export of live fish was due to remain in force until a Plan of
Management for the LRFFT was completed. However, economic pressures resulting from the
ethnic tension hastened the discontinuation of the moratorium. In mid March 2001, licenses to
conduct live fish export operations were granted by the Minister for Fisheries without
adherence to due process involving consultation with specialists within the Fisheries Division.
The establishment of a Fisheries Advisory Council (FAC) is required under Section 4 of the
Fisheries Act 1998. The Council’s mandate is to advise the Minister on matters pertaining to
conservation, protection and development of fisheries in Solomon Islands. It is designed to
ensure transparency and accountability in Ministerial actions. However, in the absence of the
formation of the FAC, the moratorium was lifted.
42
3.2.4 Management Impediments
There are a number of difficulties that hamper integrated and cohesive management of the
LRFFT in Solomon Islands. There is poor communication between national and provincial
governments and between Ministries. The Foreign Investment Board, for example, issued a
fisheries-based investment license with no prior consultation with SIFD. During the
moratorium, the Western Province government issued a business license to a company called
South Pacific Live Fish and Marine Export. The company then bought live fish from fishers
in Marovo and Roviana Lagoons. South Pacific Live Fish and Marine Export is the same
group of people as Ika Holdings and Asia Pacific Imports and Exports Company Ltd. The
company also changed the name of their vessel from John Franklin to Western Star. The
company exploited administrative loopholes and government fragmentation to continue
operating on a limited scale, in anticipation of the rumoured lifting of the moratorium. On the
18th December 1999, the Western Star sank when it struck a reef outside Monggo Passage in
Marovo Lagoon. The vessel was transporting almost two tonnes of live fish from Sasavelle
Village in Roviana Lagoon to holding pens at Vacambo Village in Marovo Lagoon (Smith,
1999). The vessel has since been replaced. Reports also reached SIFD from Hong Kong that
shipments of live fish had arrived from Solomon Islands. The precise origin of these
shipments is unknown.
In Marovo and Roviana Lagoons, alternative income-generating opportunities from fishing
are not as lucrative, in the short term, as the LRFFT. Aside from weekly shipments of fish on
ice to Honiara, there is a fisheries centre in both Marovo and Roviana Lagoons. However, the
centre in Marovo Lagoon, near the airport at Seghe, is a prohibitive distance for many fishers
to travel with their catch, given that most fishers have only a wooden paddle canoe. The
fisheries centre in Roviana Lagoon is located centrally in Munda, a more populous and
developed town than Seghe. Most Roviana villages are in close proximity to Munda. Fishers
are able to sell their catch directly, and easily, to the centre. There is also a tourist resort that
buys local catch and the Solomon Taiyo cannery at Noro, which employs people from Munda
and the surrounding area. Johannes (1999) stated that fishers in Roviana Lagoon complained
that the price difference between live and dead fish was not substantial given the level of post
harvest mortality in the LRFFT. Even in Hapai, the Roviana village involved in the LRFFT
situated furthest from Munda and its markets, villagers stated that unless the company offered
higher prices, they would be unperturbed if the company did not return.
43
Following the issue of the moratorium in February 1999, there was increasing pressure from
the industry and some of the resources owners to re-open the trade. Despite the moratorium,
12.1 tonnes of fish were exported in April 1999 on a special arrangement with the Minister of
Fisheries and South Pacific Live Fish and Marine Products Limited (George Boape, Chief
Fisheries officer (licensing), pers. comm., 2001). These fish were kept at cage stations at
Ontong Java and Marovo Lagoon before the moratorium was in place.
In late November 2000, following the civil unrest in Solomon Islands, a new government took
power following the coup in June of that year. Under the new Minister of Fisheries, the
moratorium was lifted. This followed the economic turmoil that arose from the ethnic tension.
Major companies in Solomon Islands including the Solomon Taiyo Limited, Gold Ridge
Mining Company and Solomon Island Plantation Limited permanently closed down their
operations. Their closures have had a major effect on government revenue.
3.2.5 License Application Procedure
Currently, all foreign LRFFT operators wishing to establish in Solomon Islands must first
undergo a screening process by the Foreign Investment Board (FIB). Once the FIB analyses
and approves the proposal, the operator must then enter negotiations with the customary right
holders in the area in which they wish to commence operations. Negotiation includes
presentation of an operational plan, outlining the prices offered for live fish, village royalty
arrangements, net cage placement, duration of the operation, and any employment and
training arrangements. Once the resources owners are happy with the operational plan, the
two parties have to sign an agreement.
This agreement is then presented the Provincial Government, who will assess an application
for a Provincial Business License, which will allow the operator to conduct business in the
Province. In order to export the live product, however, the operator must obtain the Fish
Processing Establishment License from the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources. This
will enable them to export overseas either by sea or air. The procedure, if properly adhered to,
places the customary resource owner as the pivotal decision maker in the issue of licenses to
export live fish from Solomon Islands.
3.2.6 Status of the LRFFT as at the end of 2001
At the end of 2001, three live fish export licenses were issued to different operators for a
duration of one year. These companies are:
44
� Pacific Supplies Limited;
� Philma Export Fisheries; and
� Williams International.
Two Solomon Island Chinese citizens own Pacific Supplies Limited, formally known as Ika
Holdings and Asia Pacific Imports and Exports Company Ltd. The company engaged a carrier
boat named MV Charter Wide Investment from Hong Kong to purchase fish. The company
was granted a Western Provincial Business License after signing of an agreement between the
company and the Roviana communities of Sasavele and Nusahope. Pacific Supplies Limited
was also to negotiate with another two villages in Rendova, south of the main Western
Province island of New Georgia (Figure 3.1), where an agreement was signed with the village
elders of Agagana and Kegolo villages. Pacific Supplies Limited then negotiated agreements
with chiefs from the Roviana communities of Saikile, Olive and Araroso to establish live
fishing activities in their territorial waters. Fishing is due to commence in earnest during the
seasonal spawning aggregations in Roviana Lagoon.
Philma Export Fisheries is owned by an Australian and a Solomon Islands national. They
own a vessel named MV Sovereign. The company has licenses to operate in Western and
Temotu provinces. MV Sovereign operated in Marovo Lagoon, Western Province, after
negotiating an agreement with some of the reef owners to start purchasing fish. These are
mainly villages surrounding Mbili, Monggo and Charapoanna passages. Philma Export
Fisheries purchased the target species for $25.00 per fish at any size and bycatch at a lower
price. Approval for MV Sovereign to purchase live fish in Marovo Lagoon was later
withdrawn due to disputes among resource owners. Philma Export Fisheries’ license is still
valid for live fish export operations but they no longer purchase fish in Western Province. The
company plans to return to Temotu province in time to operate during the spawning
aggregation season.
The only Company that is yet to operate is Williams International, owned by two other
Solomon Chinese citizens and will eventually operate in Isabel Province.
3.2.7 Status of Spawning Aggregations: Marovo Lagoon
In February 2000, Lyle Squire, an experienced and highly regarded tropical fisheries
consultant assessed the status of three spawning aggregation sites, located in deep water
channels in Marovo Lagoon, where it was known that LRFFT activity had centred. He
adopted the technique of Underwater Visual Census (UVC), which is commonly used to
45
provide rapid estimates of relative abundance, biomass and length frequency distribution of
reef fish (Samoilys, 1997). After consulting local fishers in regard to the timing of the
aggregations, the survey was carried out on the new moon, which is consistent with the timing
of aggregations from a major study in Palau (Johannes et al., 1999). The assessment focused
on the three main species targeted for the LRFFT in Solomon Islands - Plectropomus
areolatus, Epinephelus fuscoguttatus and E. polyphekadion. A female P. areolatus was caught
and the gonads inspected for eggs to confirm that the fish were forming a spawning
aggregation and not a feeding aggregation. Two of the passages were too long to do in a
single dive. These sites were dived at separate times on separate days. Table 3.4 records the
counts from this assessment.
Table 3.4. Counts from first UVC assessment, conducted on the new moon.
Passage Date P. areolatus E. fuscoguttatus E. polyphekadion
Charapoanna 1-2/2/2000 140 50 60
Monggo 3-4/2/2000 18 16 8
Lolomo 5/2/2000 78 0 38
Data Source: Lyle Squire
The counts were very low and individuals of all species were very small, which are indicative
of overfishing. All three species showed a change in the normal sex ratio, in that males were
absent from the UVC counts. From Mr Squire’s UVC experience, gained in other spawning
aggregation sites throughout the Indo-Pacific region, he strongly recommend that the sites be
closed to all forms of fishing and allowed to recuperate and that if the recommendation were
not carried out, it would be realistic to see a total collapse of the fishery in the near future.
These results were conveyed to senior members of the Ministry. However, owing to a
disagreement over the actual timing of grouper spawning aggregations, a powerful minority
group pointed out that the numbers obtained from the UVC during new moon were low
because of the timing of the counts and that the assessment should be conducted on the full
moon.
Due to disturbing findings from the counts obtained at the new moon lunar phase, it was
decided to conduct a reassessment on the full moon lunar phase. A full UVC operation was
carried out at the next full moon lunar phase.
Table 3.5. Counts from second UVC assessment, conducted on the full moon.
46
Passage Date P. areolatus E. fuscoguttatus E. polyphekadion
Charapoanna 23 and 26/2/00 42 24 18
Monggo 25/2/00 1 0 2
Lolomo 24/2/00 1 0 0
Data Source: Lyle Squire
As indicated by the data in Table 3.5, the low counts at the full moon lunar phase confirmed
that the actual spawning time was at the lunar phase of the new moon. The numbers of fish
were lower than the previous assessment and the fish that were seen were not exhibiting any
signs of spawning behaviour. Mr Squire reiterated his recommendation that fishing be stopped
at all three spawning aggregation sites immediately, as fish stocks were showing signs of low
recruitment and imbalanced sex ratios.
47
Chapter 4: Fisheries Management Framework in Solomon Islands
Attempts by central fisheries authorities to order traditional fishing communities to follow
regulations with which they do not necessarily concur, has inevitably resulted in non-
compliance. At the institutional level, fisheries departments are a fairly new development in
the Pacific Islands region. The oldest dedicated colonial Government fisheries services came
into being in the late 1950s. Community policies on fisheries management usually have
somewhat less recent origins (Adams, 1998). Pacific Island communities, in general, have a
much stronger proprietary or custodial attitude to marine resources than most other societies,
even in cases where ownership of resources has been officially assumed by the state (Adams
and Ledua, 1997).
Fisheries authorities in the Pacific are often hindered by a paucity of financial resources and
enforcement is, consequently, minimal. Dalzell et al. (1996) stated, however, that in many
countries, despite varying levels of government “interference”, local communities have
continued to manage local fisheries, particularly the non-commercial food fin-fish that still
make up the majority of the catch from Pacific Island coastal waters. Local level, common
property type systems of marine tenure regulate access to, and use of, resources, and as such
function as fisheries management systems (Hviding and Baines, 1994). Such systems of
customary marine tenure define the property rights of marine resource owners, such that the
owners accrue all the benefits from the resource but are equally responsible for any detriment
that is caused. Traditional owners, consequently, have a vested interest in managing their
marine estate efficiently and in a sustainable manner (Donnelly et al., 2000).
In Solomon Islands, Hviding (1996) described the traditional regulations imposed on fishing
rights holders within each customarily held estate of land and sea in Marovo Lagoon. Specific
prohibitions concerning types of fish or certain fishing grounds were explicitly announced and
enforced by clan leaders at any time, sometimes for a duration of several years. These
prohibitions, or spiritually sanctioned taboos, were defined as hope. The general fishing
taboo, hope chinaba, applied to all types of fishing in an area of reef marked by raised sticks.
This would be imposed by a chief in preparation for a large feast or simply as a response to
localized overfishing. Hope chinaba involved a rotation among taboo and non-taboo reefs and
such rotational closures practiced today are a continuation of these ancient taboos.
Occasionally hope chinaba was applied to the channels in Marovo lagoon to protect spawning
aggregations when the community considered the aggregations required some protection.
48
Please refer to Section 4.3) for a more detailed description of the structure of customary
marine resource management in the three study areas in Solomon Islands.
Explicit management of exploitation of spawning aggregations in Solomon Islands today
arose from concern about fish stocks targeted for the LRFFT. From his assessment of the
LRFFT in Marovo Lagoon, Johannes (1999) reported that Michi villagers, the primary owners
of Charopoana Passage, declared that due to the heavy depletion of grouper spawning
aggregations perceived to have been brought about by the LRFFT, they proposed to close the
passage to all commercial fishing immediately. They hoped to be able to work with a nearby
resort at Uepi Island to make the passage and the area around it into a marine protected area.
Similarly the villagers of Rukutu, primary owners of Lumalihe Passage said they intended to
close this passage to commercial fishing for the same reason. Ownership of this passage has
been the subject of legal proceedings, with the villagers from Telina also claiming ownership.
The people of Ramata are primary owners of three passages (Ramata, Lolomo and Pipa) in
which grouper spawning aggregations occur. In 1998, they opened Ramata Passage to LRF
fishing. Out of a desire to protect their aggregations from overfishing, they are considering in
future years to open two out of the three passages for one year, then only one the following
year, then two again, and so on. Similar protection of spawning aggregations has occurred in
Palau. For some years seasonal closures have been enforced by local government authorities
on certain spawning aggregations considered to be overfished (Johannes et al., 1999). This is
the only known case of formal protection of spawning aggregations in the Pacific. The
Queensland Fisheries Service in Australia has proposed seasonal closures for the protection of
spawning aggregations, though it has not yet been legislated (QFMA 1999).
A permanent no-take sanctuary has been established by the Pelau community in Ontong Java,
an important conservation initiative that has come from the community leaders. It therefore
has a high level of local acceptance and community ownership. In areas where limited
government resources do not permit the effective policing of reserves, and where awareness
of tradition precludes the imposition of such measures without full agreement, the long-term
moratorium, as used traditionally in many Pacific Island societies, can fulfill many of the
ecological functions of a formal marine protected area. If ownership or local use rights are not
extinguished, and if the owner community can maintain control over the disposition of any
resultant benefits, the prospects for compliance are greatly increased, and the owning
community itself would carry out most of the protection (Adams and Ledua, 1997).
49
Traditional knowledge and long established management methods do not necessarily adapt
readily to the evolution of cash economies, rapid population growth, new export markets,
commercial fishing and advances in fishing gear technology. However, the pressure that these
changes exert on marine resources hastens demand for management measures to be
implemented. The success of precautionary and adaptive management initiatives in Vanuatu
(Johannes, 1998), based on education and cooperation with traditional resource owners,
emphasizes the need to integrate centralized (i.e. government) and community based
management regimes. Johannes (1998) found that depletion of trochus resources on near
shore reefs due to commercial pressure was denying villagers a vital source of cash income.
An education initiative was conducted by the Fisheries Division that focused on reproductive
biology of the species and management measures appropriate for their sustainable exploitation
– refugia, minimum sizes, seasonal closures etc. In the face of depletion of other species,
villagers enthusiastically sought further information that might be applied to other fisheries
within their marine estates.
In Solomon Islands, local fishers largely adhere to customary tenure and access rights.
Outside investors are obligated to obtain permission from traditional resource owners prior to
the commencement of commercial resource exploitation. The basis for integrated co-
management of fisheries resources is, therefore, well established.
4.1 Legal Framework for the Management of the LRFFT
4.1.1 International Conventions and Instruments
Solomon Islands is a party to a number of international conventions, which impact on the
conservation and management of fisheries resources. In addition to these, there are a number
of international instruments, which although not legally binding, are widely accepted as
principles that have significant moral persuasion in the management and conservation of
fisheries resources. The most pertinent conventions and instruments are outlined in Table 4.1.
Table 4.1. International conventions and instruments that apply to LRFFT management.
International Conventions Implications for LRFFT Management
1982 United Nations
Convention on the Law of
the Sea
• Imposes an obligation on States to conserve fisheries resources (Art 61) and
to protect and preserve the marine environment (Art 192).
• Gives coastal States considerable discretion in establishing measures that
would achieve the conservation obligations of UNCLOS, including
50
regulation of seasons and areas of fishing (Art 62(4)).
UN Fish Stocks Agreement • Application of the precautionary approach (Art 5(c)).
• Adoption of conservation and management measures for species belonging
to the same ecosystem, associated with or dependent upon the target stocks,
with a view to maintaining or restoring populations of such species above
levels at which their reproduction may become seriously threatened (Art
5(e)).
• Adoption of plans necessary to ensure the conservation of such species and
to protect habitats of special concern (Art 6(3)(d)).
1992 Convention on
Biological Diversity
• Sustainable use of “biological resources” includes “genetic resources,
organisms or parts thereof, populations, or any other biotic component of
ecosystems with actual or potential use value for humanity” (Art 2).
• Obliges States to identify and monitor “species and communities that are
threatened” and to adopt sound measures to act as incentives to the
conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity (Art 11).
International Instruments Implications for LRFFT Management
Chapter 17 of the Agenda 21
Programme of Action for
Sustainable Development
• Asserts approaches to management and development that are “integrated in
content and are precautionary and anticipatory in ambit”.
• Involve individuals, groups or organisations in planning and decision
making steps (paragraph. 17.5(b)).
FAO Code of Conduct for
Responsible Fishing
• Maintenance of the quality, diversity and availability of fishery resources in
sufficient quantities for present and future generations in the context of food
security, poverty alleviation and sustainable development (Art 5).
• Obliges States to facilitate the adoption of fisheries practices that avoid
conflict among fisheries resource users, and between them and other users of
the coastal area (Art 10.1.4).
Jakarta Mandate on Marine
and Coastal Biological
Diversity 1995
• Development of marine protected areas for conservation and sustainable
resource use.
• Monitoring of status and threats.
Kyoto Declaration and Plan
of Action on the Sustainable
Contribution of Fisheries to
Food Security 1995
• Emphasises the importance of fisheries as a food source for the world’s
population, particularly relevant in that reef fish is a major source of protein
for Solomon Islanders.
Adapted from Aqorau (2001)
51
4.1.2 National Framework for the Management of the LRFFT
The National legal framework consists of Acts of Parliament and Ministerial Regulations,
which are outline in Table 4.2.
Table 4.2. National framework for the conservation and management of the LRFFT.
National Legislation Implications for LRFFT Management
Fisheries Act 1998 Main legislative framework – see detailed description below.
Environment Act 1998 Requires developers (in the fishing & marine industry) to submit an
application to carry out any prescribed development. Once approved, the
developer must submit an EIS (§17).
Foreign Investment Act (Cap. 142) Foreign investors are required to apply to the Foreign Investment Board
for approval to conduct business in the LRFFT (§5)
Customs and Excise Act (Cap. 121) Has an implication for the LRFFT, especially in monitoring the volume of
exports and, potentially, the value of exports from Solomon Islands.
Adapted from Aqorau (2001)
4.1.3 The Fisheries Act 1998
Solomon Islands Fisheries Act 1998 is one of the most innovative and comprehensive
fisheries legislation in the South Pacific region. The Act sets out the objective of fisheries
management and development as the:
“long-term conservation and the sustainable utilisation of the fishery resources for
the benefit of the people of Solomon Islands” (§3)
This principle objective contrasts sharply with that of the previous Fisheries Act of 1972,
which emphasised maximum exploitation of marine resources. The 1998 Act applies modern
values of responsible fisheries management and introduces a new approach to fisheries
management through the formulation of fisheries management and development plans (§7)
stipulating the precautionary approach be applied to the conservation, management and
exploitation of fisheries resources and preservation of the marine environment (§11). The Act
calls for the formulation of a fisheries management and development plan if the:
“situation with respect to a single fishery or fishery management area is such as to
require special consideration, in respect of fisheries management or development
including specification of licensing programs or limitations of catch or effort,
52
special provisions may be made for such fishery or fishery management area
within the framework of a plan under subsection (1) or (2) or as a supplement to
the plan (§7(5)).
The moratorium, imposed on all new live fish export licenses, on the 6th February 1999
signified such ‘special consideration’ and necessitated the formulation of a management and
development plan for the LRFFT based fishery.
The Fisheries Act 1998 limits the powers of the Minister for Fisheries by requiring the
Minister to comply with strict principles for conservation and management of fisheries
resources (§4), including respect for customary fishing rights holders (§12). Importantly, in
recognition of the range of groups affected by fisheries related decisions, the Act adopts an
integrated approach to fisheries management by the establishment of a Fisheries Advisory
Council (§5), whose membership encompasses the major stakeholders in the fishery. The
purpose of the Council is to make the decision-making process for the Minister more wide-
ranging and transparent. Salient points from the Act that apply to management of the LRFFT
are presented in Table 4.3.
Table 4.3. Components of the Fisheries Act 1998 that are relevant to the management of the
LRFFT .
Component Description
Principles of
Conservation and
Management
Under §4 of the Fisheries Act, the Minister must have regard to:
• §4(a) The principle that Solomon Islands fisheries resources shall be managed,
developed and conserved so as to ensure, through proper conservation and
management measures, the maintenance of those resources is not endangered by
overexploitation, and that those resources are utilised at a level, which ensures their
optimum sustainable yield;
• (b) The principle that marine biodiversity, coastal and aquatic environments of
Solomon Islands shall be protected and managed in a sustainable manner;
• (c) The application of the precautionary approach shall be applied to the conservation,
management and exploitation of fisheries resources in order to protect the fisheries
resources and preserve the marine environment;
• (d) The sustainable utilisation of Solomon Islands fisheries resources so as to achieve
economic growth, human resource development, employment creation and a sound
ecological balance, consistent with its National development objectives;
• (g) Any customary rights of customary rights holders over or in relation to any area
within Solomon Islands waters; and
53
• (h) Respect for any fisheries management and development plans made in accordance
with the Fisheries Act 1998.
Fisheries
Management and
Development Plans
Fisheries Management and Development Plans must be prepared in accordance with the
foregoing principles. The Act provides some guidelines on the content of such plans
(§8)(1)). The plans must:
• §8(1)(a) Identify the fishery and its characteristics, including its current state of
exploitation;
• (b) Specify the objective to be achieved in the management of the fishery;
• (c) Specify the management and development strategies to be adopted for the fishery,
and the limitations, if any, to be applied to the issue of licenses in respect of the
fishery;
• (d) Identify any possible adverse environmental effects of the operation of fishing
activities in the fishery, together with proposals for the management of those effects;
• (e) Specify the information and other data required to be given or reported for
effective management and development; and
• (f) Take into account any relevant traditional fishing methods.
Role of Provincial
Governments
Under §7(2) of the Act, each Provincial government must prepare a management and
development plan for LRFFT operations in their Provincial waters, pursuant to a
designation of ‘special consideration’ under §7(5).
Under §10 of the Act, each Provincial government may make Ordinances not inconsistent
with the Act for the regulation of fisheries within its Provincial waters. Such ordinances
may provide for any or all of the following:
• §10(3)(a) Measures for the development of fisheries in Provincial waters and the
approval of fisheries development projects;
• (b) The registration or recording of customary fishing rights, their boundaries and the
persons or groups entitled under those rights;
• (c) Open and closed seasons for fishing for all or any species of fish or other aquatic
organisms in all or any areas of Provincial waters, based on scientific advice;
• (d) The closure of areas in which fishing for all or any species of fish or other aquatic
organisms may be prohibited;
• (e) Prescribing the minimum species sizes for all or any species of fish or other
aquatic organisms caught and retained or collected in all or any fisheries management
areas in Provincial waters;
• (g) Prohibiting specified methods of fishing that are harmful to fisheries and the
environment, or the use of specified types of fishing gear in Provincial waters; and
• (h) The establishment and protection of marine reserves.
54
Customary Fishing
Rights
• §12(1) the Act stipulates that commercial fishing, in waters subject to customary
fishing rights be carried out subject to such rights. Compensation may be claimed for
breaches of customary fishing rights (§12(3)).
Import and Export
of Live Fish
• §32 of the Act prohibits the import and export of live fish without the consent of the
Director. Persons seeking to import or export live fish must provide an environmental
impact statement (EIS). Where live fish is exported, the EIS should show the impact
of harvesting of live fish on the fishery resources.
• Under §59, the Minister may make regulations prescribing the prohibition or
regulation of the export of specified species of fish, other aquatic organisms and fish,
or other aquatic organism products and fish products.
Enforcement • Fisheries Officers, Police Officers and Provincial officers are empowered under §37
of the Act to stop, board and search any fishing vessel or fishing processing
establishment or premises, for the purpose of ascertaining whether the Act has been
contravened.
• The enforcement powers under the Act are fairly broad and wide-ranging. For
instance, authorised officers may arrest a vessel outside Solomon Islands waters
without a warrant following pursuit.
(adapted from Aqorau, 2001 and Smith (unpublished), 1999).
4.2 Administrative Framework
Resource management is a shared responsibility between the National Government and
Provincial Governments, excluding Honiara. The demarcation of authority is spatially
determined. Under the Provincial Government Act 1997, Province’s have responsibility for all
fisheries except tuna, up to three nautical miles from each island in the Province. The LRFFT
would therefore be subject to Provincial Government Ordinances if the trade were confined to
Provincial waters. The LRFFT, however, traverses Provincial and National Government
jurisdiction. It is, consequently, not feasible for one body to manage the fishery at the
exclusion of the other (Aqorau, 2001).
4.2.1 Fisheries Division
The Fisheries Division of the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources is responsible for
ensuring the sustainable development and management of Solomon Island’s living marine
resources. The Division is structured in three sections. The responsibilities attached to each
division are outlined in Table 4.4.
55
Table 4.4. Structure and responsibilities of the Solomon Islands Fisheries Division.
Section Responsibilities
Research and Resource
Management
• Provides technical and scientific advice to government on all aspects of
subsistence, artisanal and commercial fisheries development and
management, and has responsibility in these matters for both domestic and
foreign fishing.
• Undertakes resource assessment surveys relevant to the monitoring of
exploited stocks.
Licensing, Surveillance and
Enforcement
• Responsible for the licensing of fishing vessels and fish processing
establishments.
• In the case of vessels with foreign interests, licenses can only be issued by
the Section following approval of the proposed arrangement by the Foreign
Investment Board. Such vessels must also be registered in the Regional
Register maintained by the South Pacific Forum Fisheries Agency.
Provincial Development and
Extension Services
• Manages the development and management of rural fisheries, mostly
through the maintenance of fisheries centres.
• A number of externally funded projects come under the Section’s
responsibility. Such projects have included the OFCF-sponsored Coastal
Bottom Fish Fishery Development Project, the EU-sponsored Rural Fishing
Enterprises Project, a Canadian-sponsored project to establish rural fishing
cooperatives, a USAID-funded Rural Fishing and Marketing Project, and a
Japan International Cooperation Association-funded project aimed at
improving national fish marketing.
Fisheries Division’s role is to administer the live fishery and to work in collaboration with
Provincial Fisheries and traditional resource owners. Duties include, but are not limited to:
• Administration of licensing;
• Administration of fees and charges;
• Secretariat for Fisheries Advisory Committee and sub-committees;
• Data collection and management;
• Coordination of observer program;
• Training and operation of a spawning aggregation monitoring program;
• Carry out community extension for best-practice, including live fish handling, storage and
transportation to minimise post harvest losses;
• Encourage the use of marine protected areas;
56
• Provide advice to resource owners who wish to enter into a formal agreement with a live
reef fish export company to strengthen their ability to negotiate with foreign dealers;
• Collaborate with resource owners and Provincial Fisheries on enforcement of license
conditions and Reef Owner Agreement conditions; and
• Encourage the development of airfreight transport of live fish.
The ethnic tension (described in Chapter 3 Section 3.1.4) that beset sections of the Solomon
Island severely depleted the capacity of the Fisheries Division to maintain a presence in the
field for monitoring and performance both of the fishery and of the resource. However, upon
the resumption of social and economic stability, it is hoped that part of the international
assistance to Solomon Islands will include the resources necessary for the Fisheries Division
to undertake the duties and responsibilities listed above.
4.3 Customary Resource Management in Solomon Islands
4.3.1 Customary Marine Tenure System
In traditional Solomon Islands communities, the concept of fisheries management is well
known, and practised extensively. The system of customary marine tenure, more commonly
understood as traditional rights or customary law, promotes management at the tribal level
(Kilé et al., 2000). Hviding (1989) described “customary” as referring to a system that
emerges from firmly traditional roots, that constitutes part of what is often termed ‘customary
law’, and which has continuous links with local history as it adapts to changing contemporary
circumstances. He added that, in the context of the customary marine tenure system, “marine”
refers to reefs, lagoons, coasts, and open sea, as well as islands and islets contained in the
overall sea space, and that “tenure” refers to a social process of interacting activities
concerning control over territory and access to resources.
At the institutional level, fisheries departments are a fairly new development in the Pacific
Islands region. The oldest dedicated colonial government fisheries services came into being
during the late 1950s (Adams, 1998). Colonial governments attempted to extinguish the
custom of resource or reef ownership in many islands, installing instead the western model of
the marine commons, with ultimate ownership vested in the State. Such attempts have proved
largely ineffective. Legal rights have been gravely weakened in many places, but rights are
still exercised at the practical level. Many modern industrial fishery managers now embrace
the concept of fishery resource ownership as being possibly the only mechanism that will
mitigate the potential for future overfishing whilst being compatible with a market-regulated
57
economy (Adams and Ledua, 1997). Johannes and Riepen (1995) stated that, outside of
Australia’s Great Barrier Reef, the only places where effective control over exploitation of
marine resources is being exercised are those where customary marine tenure or some other
form of local control over such activities exists.
In Solomon Islands, customary marine tenure evolved from the lack of indigenous separation
of land and sea spheres of ownership (Aswani, 1997). The guardianship of resources of
specific areas of barrier reefs, lagoon and open sea form part of the territorial rights that are
associated with ties to a particular kindred group. Access rights to marine resources are
dependent upon the strength of the kindred association. An important aspect of customary
marine tenure is the recognition that primary rights owners - people with a recognised tie,
through descent, filiation, marriage, or at least permanent residence (Hviding, 1996) -
formulate and enforce management of their own marine territory (Fong, 1994).
Tribal property rights usually extend from the forested inland to the outer extremity of reefs.
Customary marine tenure embraces far more than just fishing rights, and its functions range
beyond the organisation of economic activities (Hviding and Ruddle, 1991). In Solomon
Islands, customary marine tenure forms part of the framework that regulates social and
political relationships and defines cultural identities (Kilé et al., 2000). Local fishers largely
adhere to customary tenure and access rights. Outside investors are required to obtain
permission from traditional resource owners prior to the commencement of commercial
resource exploitation.
4.3.2 Village Decision-Making Systems
Village decision-making is vested in the chiefs and elders who have responsibility for running
the daily activities of the villages. There is a village headman in each village. In larger
villages and tribes (more than 600 people), there is a Paramount Chief, who will usually work
with at least 10 others. This group comprises the House of Chiefs for that village or area. In
smaller villages, a village ‘organiser’ is responsible for the everyday activities of the village.
The organiser must be the chief of the village or an “original” person of that village (Kilé et
al., 2000).
Marovo Lagoon
In Marovo Lagoon, the village chief, known as the “Bangara”, rules the chiefly system, which
covers certain areas of ‘Puava’, including land, islands and reefs (Hviding, 1988). ‘Puava’
58
traditionally referred to soil or land, but in the Marovo language it is now used to mean all
land and marine areas of a ‘Butubutu’. The word ‘Butubutu’ means relations or relatives
either living together or blood-tied.
With its five languages and 11,000 people, Marovo Lagoon has several Houses of Chiefs that
rule on matters ranging from small disputes to more serious land disputes and hearings on
timber rights (Kilé et al., 2000). Marovo Bangaras exact considerable respect from their
people. Bangaras have the ‘nginira’ or the ‘power to speak’ about the Puava (Hviding, 1996)
when it comes to commercial development or investment opportunities such as tourism,
commercial fishing, agricultural development or logging. This gives the Bangara the right to
dictate decisions as he wishes.
Religion plays a very important role in village decision-making in Marovo. There are two
main Christian denominations: Seventh Day Adventists and the Methodists/United Church;
and a smaller number of the Christian Fellowship Church in the north of the lagoon. A
proportion of villager’s income is spent on church contributions and people sacrifice a
considerable amount of their time undertaking church activities (see Chapter 4 Section 4.5.6).
Raising money to meet church targets and for the attendance of children at church schools
increases the demand for cash from village fishers.
Fishing for food or local consumption in Marovo Lagoon is unregulated, especially within an
individual’s ‘Puava’ (Hviding, 1996). Disputes occur when fishing happens within an area of
seasonal closure, or nearby to someone else’s village. The Marovo Bangaras have exclusive
rights to marine resources within their tribal area. Consequently, they control the type of use
and development that they prefer. They have the final say on resource use and management,
although they are only custodians to the Butubutus or relatives (Kilé et al., 2000).
Chiefs deal with minor conflicts and disputes but the police and the higher courts are called to
deal with more severe cases. Marovo chiefs also have a local court system that sits to hear
preliminary cases, with such hearings chaired by a President and recorded by a National
Magistrate Clerk.
Roviana Lagoon
Roviana Lagoon is the most cosmopolitan of the regions studied, with a developed township
(Munda), domestic airport and access to markets. Areas in and around Munda comprise
tribally integrated communities. Decision-making in Roviana is democratic rather than
59
autocratic. Tribal leaders appoint their own chiefs through merit, while also having a tribal
committee to take care of tribal affairs. Each village has a village council that comprises the
chief plus elders and young chiefs. The council discusses matters before bringing the village
together to hear what was decided (Kilé et al., 2000).
Roviana people follow the decisions of the Bangara in relation to the taking of marine
resources, and in relation to the type of fishing gear that can be utilised. The decisions made
are communicated to both outsiders and village members, and may include directives on
where fishing is permitted and at what times. Most local people know which parts of the sea
area belongs to which tribe and, consequently, individuals know where to fish, as well as
which places they must seek permission from the chiefs to access (Kilé et al., 2000). Fishing
for subsistence by outside groups is also usually allowed.
The tribal reefs and other in-shore areas contain different fish species that are specific and
important to individual tribes for special purposes. For example, the members of the tribe will
know when and where certain fish species aggregate, or at what lunar phase catches of
different species will be high. From this traditional knowledge about species, types of habitat
and fishing areas, local people are able to demarcate tribal fishing grounds. In Roviana, there
are several hundred fishing grounds owned by the tribes that are within and near the Lagoon
(Aswani, 1997).
Roviana chiefs have their own system of handling domestic conflicts and disputes through a
House of Chief’s court system. Settling of disputes and conflicts occurs almost daily, and is a
tradition that dates back to the headhunting days. Land disputes and tribal conflicts are,
however, dealt with primarily at the village level by the chiefs or through a chiefs’ hearing,
which is conducted by a group of chiefs appointed under the national legal system to hear
such cases. Village chiefs deal with only minor conflicts and disputes but they take the
initiative in reporting severe cases to the higher courts or the police for further action. Today,
Customary Law is not as strong as in the past because it is much easier to report the case to
the Police at Munda (Kilé et al., 2000).
Ontong Java
In Ontong Java there are two Houses of Chiefs, one in each of the principal villages of Pelau
and Luaniua. Luaniua has 13 chiefs, including the two high chiefs who control most of the
power in the community. The high chiefs of Luaniua are called “Keku’u”. The high chiefs
have a very strong say in both the running of the community and the administration of its sea
60
and land resources. Pelau also has a Paramount Chief and an assistant chief, with the
Paramount Chief again called “Keku’u”. These chiefs have identical powers to those in
Luaniua. Pelau also has a House of Chiefs, which in combination with the Luaniua House of
Chiefs comprises the Council of Chiefs for Ontong Java. The Council of Chiefs will hold a
meeting at any time in response to a request from any Keku’u.
Politically, Ontong Java elects a provincial member who represents the community of the
atoll in the Provincial government. At the national level, the member for the Malaita Outer
Islands represents Ontong Java. The elected national member can act only as an adviser to the
Keku’us. Religion plays a very important role in Luaniua village. One of the chiefs is also the
chairman of the church committee, with the village adhering to the Anglican faith - more
commonly called the Church of Melanesia in Solomon Islands. In addition to religious values,
the churches have also contributed to awareness raising in relation to such matters as gender,
social and cultural issues (Kilé et al., 2000).
Based on advice and information gathered from the community, the Keku’u in Ontong Java
decide on the type of fishing activities that should be employed. Certain fishing areas or
habitats are suited to different types of fishing techniques and the chief and his house will
decide which techniques will be employed in which areas. There are certain areas where the
chief will not allow netting, night diving, or spearing while other areas will be designated as
no-take zones. Bans placed on the exploitation of marine resources are the result of
cooperation between the Pelau Keku’u and the Luaniua Keku’u. The Council of Chiefs meets
to discuss the proposed ban on the harvesting of certain resources. They may also decide on
other matters affecting both communities (Kilé et al., 2000).
The Keku’us in the Houses of Chiefs on Ontong Java exercise the right of Custom Law and
implement it when dealing with conflicts and disputes. Based on this power, the chiefs may
also create by-laws to suit the community. The Keku’us have the right to punish those who
transgress Customary Law, and to impose fines according to such law. The chiefs make
special efforts to communicate the requirements of Customary Laws to the community.
Response from the Ontong Java communities shows that Customary Law is more closely
adhered to than National Law (World Bank, 1998). However, for serious criminal cases
requiring a magistrate, the Council of Chiefs will refer the case to Auki, the provincial
headquarters, or to Honiara, the national capital.
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4.3.3 Effectiveness of Customary Fisheries Management
Kilé et al. (2000) stated that although customary marine tenure in the South Pacific may be
referred to as systems of “traditional resource management”, based on “customary law”, this
does not mean that such systems are static and rigid. Rather, tradition is a system of
knowledge and rules that has strong roots in local history and experience and which is
unwritten and uncodified, thereby allowing for flexibility in adapting to changing social,
political, economic or ecological circumstances. Far from being overwhelmed by
commercialisation and resource scarcity, the customary marine tenure systems appears to
have considerable capacity for handling and adapting to new circumstances, thereby
becoming potentially important tools in the contemporary management of fisheries.
This adaptability was demonstrated most poignantly in Ontong Java, where adherence to
custom law is strongest of the three study areas. The Council of Chiefs imposed a customary
closure or “tabu”, which is a practice that restricts the use of certain resources for
conservation purposes. They imposed an alternating 12-month ban on the harvest of bêche-de-
mer and trochus, beginning in 1991, due to apparent over-exploitation.
The growing demand for cash, combined with high population growth in Ontong Java, places
additional pressure on resources and the leadership of the resource owners. Notwithstanding
this, the Pelau House of Chiefs has established a no-take conservation area, comprising two
islands, a lagoon and fringing reef. It has a high level of local acceptance and community
ownership. The Pelau House of Chiefs also rejected the operational terms of the LRFFT
operator, even though the revenue from the fishery was highly sought. This autonomy is an
essential component of community-based co-management of the LRFFT in Solomon Islands.
4.3.4 Integration with Centralised Management
While customary management systems have much to offer to the management of inshore
fisheries such as the LRFFT, they tend to come under increased pressure when commercial
considerations become significant. Pressure from outside entrepreneurs, coupled with the
desire for increased cash incomes at the village level, have the potential to undermine
customary marine tenure and management systems. It is for this reason that supporting
government legislation is important to the management of the resources in question.
Furthermore, the government has an important role in the education of village fishers who
may not fully understand the medium and long-term impacts of certain fishing practices, such
as the targeting of spawning aggregations.
62
Legally established and endorsed community empowerment, coupled with clearly defined
property rights of traditional resource owners in relation to access to, and use of, resources
within traditional marine estates affords custom owners security of tenure. This provides
owners with the incentive to manage their marine resources in a sustainable manner. It also
relieves centralised fisheries authorities of the often-insurmountable task of comprehensive
enforcement of regulations. Traditional owners, bypassing the data-intensive, quantitative
models that typify the basis for modern fisheries management decision-making, can
implement management initiatives on a highly specific basis.
In Solomon Islands, traditional resource owners are eager to control access to, and use of,
resources within their marine estates, and to manage those resources in a sustainable manner.
However, these traditional owners require government support in the form of appropriate
legislation, education and assistance with legal arrangements. The bipartisan transfer of
technology, between decision-makers in clan-based groups and from government, is pivotal to
the establishment of appropriate policy and management guidelines.
4.4 Community-based Co-management
Pacific Islands economies are in a state of flux. One of the economic changes involves a
gradual transformation from subsistence fisheries to commercial fisheries. Currently, around
three-quarters of the coastal fishery products landed in the Pacific Islands do not enter the
cash economy, but find their way directly onto the tables of families in villages. As the cash
economy broadens, however, marine resources are one of the first ways that rural people can
develop incomes. However, traditional fishery governance systems are not geared to
entrepreneurial development, and many of the most commercially feasible reef resources are
ecologically fragile (Adams, 1997).
Centralised fisheries authorities, often a legacy of colonial occupation, assumed that access to
fishing in the sea was unrestricted and, as such, there was no incentive for an individual to
limit fishing effort. Fisheries management has, consequently, focused heavily on imposing
restrictions on fishing effort to prevent what was often seen as the inevitable overfishing and
depletion of fish stocks. Most Pacific islands, however, have small fisheries administrations,
with little research capacity to gather the comprehensive information required for
management. Consequently, centralised coastal fisheries management in much of the South
Pacific is largely based on intuition rather than on collected observations and experience.
Johannes (1994) argued that this very problem is an opportunity to seek a new paradigm for
63
fisheries management in the South Pacific - one that is not based on the conventional
approach of intensive data gathering and analysis, but based on self-reinforcing feedback
systems at the local level. Community-based approaches to management essentially involve
‘bottom-up’ or ‘grass-root’ planning. This means that communities would be involved in
determining fisheries management measures, supervising their implementation and invoking
penalties when management measures and guidelines are ignored (Doulman, 1992).
Research in recent years, into the widespread existence of local-level common property type
systems of marine tenure, has challenged the view of conventional fisheries management.
Such systems regulate access to and use of resources, thereby acting as fisheries management
systems (Hviding and Baines, 1994), Today, it is widely recognised, in the wake of degraded
inshore habitats and depleted fish stocks, that conventional fisheries management has largely
failed. Hviding (1996) stated that traditional reef-and-lagoon fisheries in Oceania are
invariably regulated by customary marine tenure. This relates partly to an apparent lack of
cognitive dichotomy between land and sea that characterises the region. Throughout Oceania,
both types of environment are usually considered subgroups of the same main category. This
represents the most striking difference between management ideologies in the Pacific and
those found elsewhere, where a dichotomy does exist and it is often contrasted as ‘regulated
land’ versus ‘unregulated sea’. The land-sea continuum contained within the estates of clan
groups reflects a lack of disengagement between humans and their environment. Both
environments are seen as necessary for the sustenance of clan members. This has fundamental
implications for daily human practice in using the environment, in a context whereby a proper
meal must contain the fruits of both land and sea.
Adams (1998) stated that almost all nations throughout the South Pacific practice some form
of localised stewardship over land and sea resources. This usually involves ownership of reefs
and lagoons, and sometimes a substantial portion of open sea, by a matrix of relatively small
social units. Community management of resources is usually beneficial to subsistence reef
fisheries because it operates at the scale of the individual reef. In small-island countries,
where almost all members of the local community make full and regular use of reef resources,
anomalies and trends are quickly spotted and corrective action can be quickly taken (Adams,
1996). Doulman (1992) observed that the exclusive right to use in-shore fisheries resources,
combined with communal decision making about their management, engenders a natural
concern for their proper use.
64
Prohibitions on the types of fish that could be caught and prohibitions on specific fishing
grounds have been practiced for many generations. Hviding (1996) stated that, in Morovo
Lagoon for example, there were closures in preparation for ceremonial feasts such as those
connected with funerary rites and there were closures whereby areas of reef would be opened
and closed on a rotational basis. These closures are likely to be a response to localised
overfishing. Johannes (1988) stated that marine resources have always existed in quantities
surplus to the requirements of the local population. There was little conservation ethic due to
little exploitative pressure exerted on the resources. Therefore, when an export market
develops and places added pressure on resources, fishers are often unaware of the
vulnerability of the resources to overexploitation.
Customary marine tenure is not the only factor that determines whether a commercial fishery
is managed effectively. Such cases demand integration of modern and traditional management
in order to reinstate a functional property rights structure, underwritten by appropriate
legislation. Management decisions are influenced by economic pressures and constraints,
which in turn are contingent on the price obtainable for the resource; the effort required in
obtaining the resource and then marketing it. Management is also informed by fishers’
knowledge of the biology, ecology and population dynamics of the target species (Johannes
1982). Such local knowledge may comprise several different categories of information, each
of which may be useful to the management of a fishery. Johannes (1998b) noted that this
intimacy with the local resource base forms a dataless, but up-to-date and cost effective way
of monitoring the status of fishery resources, whereby management prescriptions can be
applied quickly and highly specifically to a particular area.
4.4.1 Successes and Failures
In other countries, where declining fish stocks have necessitated action on behalf of
centralised fisheries management, compliance with management initiatives has relied heavily
on integration with traditional management systems.
In Samoa, King and Fa’asili (1999) found that village groups were willing to partition areas of
their marine estate as fish reserves in key habitat areas in an effort to mitigate stock decline.
Villagers undertook monitoring and enforcement of management initiatives because the
degree of benefit and detriment to their own resource base was their responsibility. An
important limitation should be noted in this case in that villagers, conscious of not
endangering their ability to provide food for their families, often chose areas of degraded reef
65
or of little conservation value to partition. This serves to highlight the need for the integration
of community level awareness raising in such projects.
Fa’asili and Kelekolo (1999) noted that cessation of destructive fishing techniques and
overexploitation of marine resources in Samoa was best achieved by the development of
village fisheries by-laws, formulated mainly by the villagers themselves. The most important
processes were found to be monitoring and enforcement. Breaches of such by-laws within the
village were dealt with using traditional fines of pigs and taro etc. Breaches from outside the
village community were dealt with through a court of law.
Johannes (1998a) detailed the complexity of traditional rights to marine tenure in Vanuatu.
More than 100 language groups adopt differing resource tenure customs. However, exercising
the right to exclude outsiders and to regulate activities on fishing grounds is intensifying.
Declining fish stocks heightened the urgency with which traditional owners sought to protect
marine resources within their estate. The emergence of a number of invertebrate species as
important exportable resources challenged the traditional management system concerning
sustainable exploitation. A process of cooperative management arose whereby the Fisheries
Department of Vanuatu provided advice concerning life histories and population dynamics to
resource owners, who subsequently, monitored the resource inventory and regulated the level
of exploitation within the boundaries of their own tenure.
Adams (1996) outlined the linkage between community and government in Fiji. The
government formally recognises the right of communities to recommend restrictions on
fishing gear, area, or target species on any license. The government then records the
boundaries of traditional fishing rights areas, and mediates the settlement of such boundaries
by agreement between neighbouring communities, or any changes that might subsequently
ensue. The community can formally nominate one of its number to be an honorary fish
warden, with powers to investigate fishing occurring within that area and to escort suspected
offenders to the nearest authority. Government fisheries officers cannot issue a fishing license
to any person who has not already obtained the written permission of the representative of the
customary fishing rights area where the intention is to fish. A separate permit must be
obtained for each such target area, each of which may apply a different set of access
conditions. There are also regular general meetings between the community administration
and government officers, at which fisheries management issues can be discussed.
66
Johannes (1998b) pointed out that traditional management systems were data-less and yet the
prescribed management measures of seasonal closures, size restrictions and restricted entry
were no different from that which is prescribed today. He noted that the data needed for
management were often not cost effective to generate, especially when the coastline is of a
prohibitive length. Traditional knowledge and long established management methods do not
necessarily adapt readily to the evolution of cash economies, rapid population growth, new
export markets, commercial fishing and advances in fishing gear technology. However, the
pressure that these changes exert on marine resources hastens demand for management
measures to be implemented. The success of precautionary and adaptive management
initiatives in Vanuatu (Johannes, 1998a) and Fiji (Fong, 1994), based on education and
cooperation with traditional resource owners, emphasises the need to integrate centralised and
community based management regimes.
Adams and Ledua (1997) point out that the Pacific Islands region is probably a lot further
along the path of effective coastal fisheries management and conservation than most other
tropical developing regions. Coastal fisheries over much of Southeast Asia are suffering from
excessive population pressure and widespread use of damaging fishing methods, and several
island food fisheries in the Caribbean are said to have collapsed. Many developing regions are
moving towards community measures and integrative co-management of artisanal fisheries of
a kind that is already practised over much of the Pacific.
67
Chapter 5: Socio-economics and the Impact of the LRFFT in Solomon
Islands
5.1 Introduction
Coral reef resources are coming under increasing pressure from human activities. This is an
issue of considerable urgency in countries where people depend on reefs for subsistence and
commercial fisheries. However, the lure of short-term financial gain, through export entry into
the international market place, has sometimes resulted in behaviour that adversely affects the
health of reef ecosystems. The diminished ability of reef ecosystems to sustain coastal
communities can result in some level of social upheaval. Coral reef degradation in the
Philippines, for example, has reduced rural food security, diminished income possibilities, and
increased malnutrition, unemployment and urban migration (Alvarez, 1996). The human
dimension of reef resource management must, therefore, play an important role in planning
the management initiatives that guide the extent to which such resources can be exploited.
5.2 Scope and Limitations of this Study
Village households in Marovo Lagoon, Roviana Lagoon and Ontong Java were surveyed to
determine the impact, if any, of the LRFFT on the social and economic environment in the
villages. The questionnaire used in this survey is included as Appendix 1. The survey
questions were based on information gathered during a pilot survey in Ontong Java and
Marovo Lagoon in late 1999 (see Appendix 2). The survey was conducted in a one-on-one
interview basis with a household member who answered questions on behalf of his or her
household. Questions compare activities conducted during the LRFFT to 1999 when there
was no LRFFT.
The questionnaire was designed in English. The Solomon Islands based research officer (RO)
then translated the questionnaire to Pijin in Marovo Lagoon. In Roviana Lagoon, the RO
conducted the survey in his native Roviana language, and then recorded responses in English.
The survey in Ontong Java was conducted by a replacement for the RO. For this arm of the
survey, it was necessary for a local assistant to be appointed so that the RO’s replacement
could read the survey and the assistant could translate the question into the Ontong Java
language then translate the response back to Pijin for recording in English. Every effort was
68
made to monitor the accuracy of responses to questions but it is expected that some
misinterpretation occurred. Overall, the data is presented with a high level of confidence.
The timing of the household survey was designed to coincide with the known spawning
season of the key target species. In this way, it was anticipated that the research team could be
on hand to supervise a creel survey. However, as a consequence of the February 1999
moratorium on the issue of new licenses to export live fish, no opportunity existed for a creel
survey. This negated the need to time the survey in this way. It became necessary to attain
fishing catch and effort data by means of the household questionnaire only. In this regard, it is
expected that fishing effort data can be presented with a high level of confidence but fishing
catch data should be used as a guide. The survey was rescheduled further to keep the project
active during the height of the ethnic tension, which is discussed in Chapter 3 (Section 3.1.3).
There was no LRFFT activity during the period of the survey, including the pilot survey.
5.3 Components of the Survey
The overall aim of the survey is to assess the impact on villagers of the LRFFT in Solomon
Islands during the period of its operation, prior to the imposition of a moratorium. The study
seeks to describe the prevailing socio-economic conditions in the three study regions and
draw comparisons between village life with, and without, the presence of a LRFFT. The
questionnaire was divided into six sections. The following section outlines the aims and
objectives for each section.
5.3.1 Activities of the household
Aim: To determine the impact on household activities, the division of labour, family and
community life that accompanied participation in the LRFFT.
Objective: Compare the amount of time that men and women in a household spent on various
tasks during the LRFFT and in the absence of the LRFFT.
5.3.2 Fishing Effort
Aim: To determine the impact on the pattern of fishing activity and the provision of
household catch that accompanied participation in the LRFFT.
Objective: Compare the weekly household fishing effort in the absence of the LRFFT to the
fishing effort exerted for the LRFFT.
69
5.3.3 Catch of LRFFT Target Species
Aim: To determine the proportion of the catch that comprises species targeted for the LRFFT.
Objective: Quantify the overall catch and the proportion of groupers in the catch whilst
fishing for the LRFFT and during 1999 in the absence of the LRFFT.
Objective: Quantify the proportion of by-catch whilst fishing for the LRFFT.
5.3.4 Patterns of Consumption of LRFFT Species
Aim: To determine the importance of key target species to the diet of village households.
Objective: Compare the frequency of household consumption of LRFFT target species.
5.3.5 Income and Expenditure
Aim: To determine the sources of villager’s income and the pattern of expenditure.
Objective: Describe the income and expenditure activity of village households.
Objective: Quantify the extent to which each nominated income and expenditure source
affects villagers.
5.3.6 Perceptions of Importance
Aim: To gauge villager’s perceptions on the relative importance of issues pertaining to, and
arising from participation in, and management of, the LRFFT.
Objective: Compare villagers’ perceptions on the importance of issues ranging from spawning
aggregations (in terms of exploitation and protection) and fisheries co-management, to the
maintenance of customary management systems.
5.4 Methods
5.4.1 Survey Implementation and Analysis
The survey sought to gain an understanding of socio-economic activities and perceptions from
villagers at the household level. Consequently, a fixed proportion of 25 per cent of the total
number of households was targeted from every village in each of the three areas previously
70
described. The survey was conducted prior to the completion of the report arising from the
1999 Census. Consequently, an estimate of the number of households in larger villages was
taken from the 1986 Census, together with consultation with local villagers. There were 252
households surveyed in Marovo Lagoon, 128 in Roviana Lagoon, and 100 in Ontong Java.
The questionnaire comprised six sections. Respondents were first asked some rudimentary
demographic questions relating to age, religion and whether or not they participated in the
LRFFT, after which the questionnaire followed the format outlined in the foregoing
‘Components of the Survey’ section.
Results were analysed and interpreted on two levels: on an inter-regional scale and on an
intra-regional scale whereby lagoons were divided, either by terms of religious affiliation (e.g.
Marovo Lagoon where Church teachings provide a basis for some of the organisational and
economic variation between communities), or by chiefly estates (e.g. Roviana Lagoon) and
clan-based estates (Ontong Java). Results were discussed in terms of:
� Perceived Necessity for the LRFFT
� Impact of the LRFFT on Village Households
� The Chilled Fishery
� Significance of the LRFFT Target Species
� Income Opportunities and the Cost of Living
� The Resource and its Management
The survey data were analysed using SPSS, a statistical package that includes analyses
appropriate for the social sciences. In order to understand the nature of socio-economic
activity in the three study areas, it was decided to adopt primarily descriptive statistics.
5.5 Inter-regional Results
5.5.1 Sample Description
A relatively basic subsistence culture and limited, but expanding, reliance on the cash
economy characterises the three study areas. Housing is typically in small dwellings in coastal
villages with relatively large households, as illustrated in Table 4.1. Limited income earning
opportunities exist and this prompted willing participation in the LRFFT, especially in
Ontong Java where isolation limits access to markets, particularly for the finfish resource.
71
Income and expenditure characteristics were separated into percentile ranges so that the
minority that earned and spent small and large sums did not overly affect the average income
and expenditure of the majority. Table 5.1 indicates that people in Roviana Lagoon earned
more in each percentile range than the other regions. Income from participation in the LRFFT
was found to be highest in Marovo Lagoon when viewed as a percentage of total income in
each percentile range. In the higher income bracket, Marovo fishers in the LRFFT earned, on
average, about 40 percent of the average total income in that bracket.
Bycatch from the LRFFT was highest in Ontong Java where the company bought little more
than half of the catch from fishers. Most of the bycatch in Marovo and Roviana Lagoons was
taken back to villages for consumption. In Ontong Java, the bycatch was mostly taken to
remote camps in close proximity to deepwater passages where fishers consumed what they
could. Participants in the LRFFT seek a large increase in payment for live fish relative to that
previously received. Fishers from Marovo and Roviana Lagoons also seek large increases in
the village royalty component relative to that previously received.
Table 5.1. Characteristics of the sample in the three study areas.
Marovo Lagoon Roviana Lagoon Ontong Java
% Households Surveyed 25 25 25
No. Respondents 252 (52.5% of total) 128 (26.7% of total) 100 (20.8% of total)
Av. Size of Household 6.6 7.3 6.4
Av. Age of Respondent 41.9 38.7 40.7
Fished in the LRFFT 115 (45.6% of ML tot.) 65 (50.8% of RL total) 65 (65.0% of OJ total)
Mean Income and Expend - 1999 Income Expend. Income Expend. Income Expend.
0% to 25% range ($SI) 853 1,676 4,235 2,017 1,134 1,662
25% to 75% ($SI) 4,984 4,097 9,117 4,558 4,437 3,610
75% to 100% range ($SI) 14,352 9,049 18,451 9,249 14,851 8,424
Mean Income and Expend - LRFFT Income Expend. Income Expend. Income Expend.
0% to 25% range ($SI) 123 9 269 38 132 55
25% to 75% ($SI) 665 56 1,106 103 528 150
75% to 100% range ($SI) 4,400 540 4,234 260 2,286 375
LRFFT Bycatch
% of the catch that Co. bought
Mean
64.3
Mean
70.9
Mean
55.9
Bycatch use (%) Mean Mean Mean
Taken to the village 57.7 63.1 28.0
Eaten at fishers camp 12.7 20.2 60.3
Sold at a market 10.0 9.4 0.0
72
Fed to captive live fish 4.5 1.7 3.3
Discarded 2.1 1.5 3.1
Released 0.0 2.8 5.4
Price Responsiveness Median Median Median
Co. should pay the fisher ($SI/kg) 20.00 20.00 25.00
Co. should pay the village ($SI/kg) 20.00 18.00 5.00
5.5.2 Activities of the Household
Figure 5.1. Householder participation and mean hours spent per week conducting particular
activities in the presence, and absence, of the LRFFT.
Marovo Lagoon - Men
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
Pa
rtic
ipa
tio
n (
%)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
Roviana Lagoon - Men
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
Pa
rtic
ipa
tio
n (
%)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
Ontong Java - Men
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
Pa
rtic
ipa
tio
n (
%)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
Marovo Lagoon - Women
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
Ho
urs
pe
r W
ee
k
1999 % LRFFT % LRFFT Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
Roviana Lagoon - Women
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
Ho
urs
pe
r W
ee
k
1999 % LRFFT % LRFFT Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
Ontong Java - Women
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
Ho
urs
pe
r W
ee
k
1999 % LRFFT % LRFFT Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
73
NB. Sample size pertaining to Figure 5.1.
n Men Women
1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT
Marovo Lagoon 249 91 250 51
Roviana Lagoon 127 65 128 47
Ontong Java 100 65 94 62
Respondents were asked the average number of hours per day, and the number of days per
week, that a man and a woman from within their household carried out nominated household
activities. This central question was divided into two parts:
1. During 1999 when there was no LRFFT in operation; and
2. During the LRFFT
An important limitation in these data was identified. The respondent could sometimes only
guess the amount of time spent on activities by other members of the household. This was
particularly apparent when men who participated in the LRFFT established a camp on an
island away from the village and were, hence, absent from witnessing the activity of women.
This scenario also applied in reverse. To circumvent this, most activities with a perceived
gender bias were removed. These activities included “Cooking”, “Household Chores” and
“Mat Weaving”. “Collecting Firewood” was excluded on the advice that this activity often
coincided with gardening. “House Repairs” was included despite the implication of the
activity as a male role. This was because men are mostly involved in the fishing activity and a
substantial increase in fishing might result in less time dedicated to the repair of the relatively
high maintenance dwellings that typify those in the villages.
In regard to measuring the amount of time dedicated to certain household activities, the
number of responses of zero hours per week was used to deduce the level of participation in
the particular activities asked of respondents. For example, 2.8 percent of Marovo men
responded zero hours per week dedicated to gardening in 1999. Consequently, the level of
participation in that activity is reported as 97.2 percent. The number of hours per week
presented in Figure 5.1 represents the mean number of hours per week for those that
participated in that activity.
In Marovo Lagoon, it is clear that both the level of participation in everyday household
activities and the number of hours dedicated per week were substantially reduced during the
operation of the LRFFT. This is more apparent for men than for women even though women
74
also participated in the LRFFT. Participation of Marovo men in gardening and farming during
the LRFFT was just over half that of 1999 and the amount of time dedicated to the activity
was also halved. The participation rate of Marovo women in gardening during the LRFFT fell
by about 35 percent. However, those that did participate spent only marginally less time. Time
spent conducting house repairs by Marovo men more than halved and the number of those
that did repair the house fell by 40 percent. Art and craft, symbolic of Marovo Lagoon, was
practiced by about 20 percent of Marovo men, compared to about 45 percent in 1999. Men
spent 10 hours per week less on their carving during the LRFFT. It is instructive to note that
marked differences exist between the amounts of time dedicated to traditional carving in
different areas within the lagoon. Please refer to Chapter 6 (Section 6.2.1) for a more detailed
examination. There was no difference for either men or women in the time dedicated to
teaching children traditional knowledge or attending to Church activities, however the rate of
participation in this activity declined during the LRFFT.
Householders in Roviana Lagoon experienced similar impacts from the LRFFT to people
from Marovo Lagoon. All nominated activities recorded a decline in the rate of participation
during the LRFFT, compared with that in 1999. Copra production, carried out by about 45
percent of respondents, fell to less than 10 percent during the LRFFT and those that did
produce copra dedicated about half as many hours per week during the LRFFT. Half as many
men, and less than half as many women, carried out house repairs during the LRFFT as they
did outside the LRFFT period. The average amount of time that men dedicated to house
repairs fell steeply from more than 12 hours per week in 1999 to less than two hours per week
during the LRFFT period. Participation rates for women teaching children traditional
knowledge and attending Church activities were affected by the occurrence of the LRFFT to a
greater extent than men, although the trade made little impact on the time dedicated to these
activities by those that did participate.
Participation in household activities by men in Ontong Java was greatly affected by the
presence of the LRFFT. All six nominated activities recorded substantial declines in
participation on behalf of the men of the household. The number of hours per week dedicated
to activities by those that did participate demonstrated little alteration to 1999. More time was
dedicated to repairing the house during the LRFFT by those that participated, than in 1999.
The atoll’s copra production declined sharply during the LRFFT with participation falling
from 84 percent to just 20 percent during the LRFFT.
75
5.5.3 Fishing Effort
Respondents were asked questions regarding, firstly, fishing activity during 1999 when there
was no LRFFT in operation. Fishing activity in 1999 was divided into two sections:
1. Household catch
2. Chilled fish to Honiara
Each of these sections was then further divided into two distinct periods within 1999:
I. During the known spawning period of LRFFT target species; and
II. Outside of this period.
Confusion arose from this division (between I and II). Consequently, most data for 1999
pertained to the year as a whole with no division, vis-à-vis, in or out of spawning season.
Insufficient data for the 1999 spawning period meant that those data could not be used to
analyse seasonal differences in fishing effort.
During the LRFFT, it was common practice to return to the village with fish that were not
bought by the operator. When groups of fishers established a camp away from the village,
they would return to the village on weekends and take any remaining bycatch with them.
During this time, there was little fishing activity, by those participating in the LRFFT,
specifically for the household. For this reason, a measure of comparison between fishing
activity in 1999 (household fishery) and for the LRFFT was recorded. Results of this
comparison are presented in Table 5.2.
Table 5.2. Comparison of fishing effort in 1999 and during the LRFFT.
No. householders No. trips/wk No. hrs/trip No. hrs/wk
1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT
Marovo n 252 115 247 112 244 113 244 111
Lagoon Mean 2.9 2.24 3.2 4.5 2.7 6.9 8.1 32.0
Median 2.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 2.0 6.0 6.0 24.0
Roviana n 128 65 127 65 128 65 127 65
Lagoon Mean 2.7 1.8 3.6 4.5 2.5 6.3 9.0 29.2
Median 2.0 2.0 3.0 5.0 2.0 6.0 8.0 25.0
Ontong n 100 65 97 65 97 65 97 65
Java Mean 1.3 1.3 2.6 5.2 5.2 8.0 13.7 43.3
Median 1.0 1.0 2.0 6.0 5.0 8.0 12.0 48.0
76
Table 5.2 indicates that fishers in Ontong Java exerted greater average individual fishing
effort, for both the household fishery and for the LRFFT, than individual fishers in either
Marovo or Roviana Lagoons. However, the number of household members that participated
in either fishery in Ontong Java was about half of the number that fished in Marovo and
Roviana Lagoons. There was a dramatic increase, in all three regions, in weekly fishing
activity during the operation of the LRFFT, compared with fishing activity in 1999. This
three-fold increase was, again, most substantial in Ontong Java where weekly fishing effort
left little time for the conduct of other activities in the household and village. Nearly a quarter
of respondents from Ontong Java reported an average duration of 10 hours per trip during the
LRFFT and one in five respondents recorded having spent 60 hours per week fishing in the
trade.
The eskies fishery (which exports chilled fish to Honiara) in Marovo Lagoon was found to
play a major role in the overall fishing activity of village fishers. Table 5.3 indicates that just
under half of the respondents fished in the eskies fishery. More than 70 per cent of households
that participated in the fishery did so with one or two members, and just fewer than 90 per
cent of these fished one or two trips per week at an average of around eight hours per trip. In
Roviana Lagoon, the fishery played a minor role with about 15 percent of respondents
indicating that they participated. Those that did, however, dedicated approximately one full
day per week to the fishery. Fishers in Ontong Java did not participate in the chilled finfish
fishery.
Table 5.3. Fishing effort in the fishery that ships chilled fish in eskies to Honiara.
Eskies fishery in 1999 Part. (%) Months H/holders Trips/wk Hrs/trip Hrs/wk
Marovo Lagoon n 49.2 125 124 122 125 122
Mean 6. 9 2.3 1.6 7.7 11.6
Median 6.0 2.0 1.0 8.0 11.0
Roviana Lagoon n 14.8 19 19 17 20 16
Mean 7.2 1.7 1.1 8.0 8.4
Median 8.0 1.0 1.0 8.0 8.0
Ontong Java n 0.0 0 0 0 0 0
77
5.5.4 Fishing Catch
Respondents were asked questions regarding fishing catch in 1999 and during the LRFFT that
corresponded with the questions regarding fishing effort. The questions were designed to
ascertain the number of fish caught per fishing trip and the number of groupers (rock cods and
coral trouts – note that photographs of these species were shown to respondents – that were
caught per fishing trip. This was done to ascertain the proportion of the total catch that
comprises species commonly targeted for the LRFFT. Questions regarding catch for 1999
related to:
1. Household catch
a) Number of fish caught
b) Number of groupers caught
2. Chilled fish to Honiara
a) Number of fish caught
b) Number of groupers caught
Each of these sections was then further divided into two distinct periods within 1999:
I. During the known spawning period of LRFFT target species; and
II. Outside of this period.
Confusion arose from this division (between I and II). Consequently, most data for 1999
pertained to the year as a whole with no differentiation with regard to spawning season.
Insufficient data for the 1999 spawning period meant that those data could not be used to
analyse seasonal differences in catch. Inconsistency in the data collection resulted in a poor
data set for fishing catch in Marovo Lagoon. This is due, in part, to a small change to the
questionnaire after a design fault led to grossly exaggerated recollections of catch in the early
part of the survey.
Table 5.4 indicates that fishers in Ontong Java caught substantially more fish than did fishers
in either of the other two regions. However, the proportion of groupers in the household catch
was highest in Marovo Lagoon (25 per cent of the median score), with Ontong Java recording
just 15 per cent of the median score for total catch.
78
Consistent with data presented for fishing effort, a measure of comparison between fishing
catch in 1999 (household fishery) and for the LRFFT was recorded. The results of this
comparison (Table 5.4) indicate that fishers in Ontong Java catch substantially more fish per
trip than fishers in either Marovo or Roviana Lagoons but the proportion of groupers caught is
greater in both Marovo and Roviana Lagoons. The median number of groupers caught per trip
during the operation of the LRFFT varied little between the three regions but the grouper
proportion of the total catch was markedly less in Ontong Java during this period. This
proportion increased greatly during the LRFFT from that experienced in 1999 in all three
study areas.
Table 5.4. Comparison of total catch, and the component of which were groupers, between
fishing activity in 1999 and during the LRFFT.
Total fish caught per trip Groupers caught per trip Grouper proportion of catch
1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT
Marovo n 76 15 75 15
Lagoon Mean 15.1 11.9 4.0 10.7 26.6% 89.9%
Median 12.0 10.0 3.0 9.0
Roviana n 127 65 127 65
Lagoon Mean 11.3 11.9 2.7 9.1 24.3% 96.0%
Median 10.0 12.0 2.0 9.0
Ontong n 97 65 97 65
Java Mean 21.4 30.7 3.8 14.7 17.9% 47.8%
Median 20.0 30.0 3.0 10.0
Fishers participating in the chilled finfish fishery in Marovo and Roviana Lagoons in 1999
reported similar catch rates of around 20 fish per trip. The proportion of groupers in this catch
was slightly higher in Marovo Lagoon (Table 5.5) but, in both regions, this proportion was
low relative to that experienced during the LRFFT.
Table 5.5. Total catch and proportion of the catch comprising groupers in the chilled fishery.
Eskies Fishery - 1999 Total fish caught per trip Groupers caught per trip Grouper proportion of catch
n 38 38
Mean 24.2 4.8 19.8%
Marovo
Lagoon
Median 20.0 4.0
n 20 20
Mean 19.4 2.5 12.6%
Roviana
Lagoon
Median 18.0 3.0
79
Ontong Java n 0 0
5.5.5 Frequency of Consumption of LRFFT Target Species
Respondents were asked questions relating to how often they eat particular fish species.
Photographs of grouper species commonly targeted for the LRFFT were shown to
respondents in order to circumvent problems associated with localised nomenclature. These
questions were designed to ascertain the importance of target species to the diet of villagers in
each region. Respondents were also asked to nominate the frequency with which they
consume these species during the known spawning season with a view to gauging whether the
occurrence of seasonal spawning aggregations altered the dietary habits of villagers.
Results reported in Figure 5.2 utilised responses of “Never” to deduce the percentage of the
sample that eat the LRFFT target species; and those that responded with “Everyday”, “Four or
five times per week”, “Two or three times per week” and “Once per week” to form a category
called “Daily-to-Weekly”, which was used to illustrate frequent consumption of the species in
question.
A striking feature of the pattern of consumption of key LRFFT species in Marovo Lagoon,
illustrated in Figure 5.2, is that whilst about two thirds of respondents reported that the three
main species (Plectropomus areolatus, Epinephelus polyphekadion and E. fuscoguttatus)
feature in their diet, only about 20 percent declared that these species feature one or more
times per week. This pattern remained static regardless of the occurrence of seasonal
spawning aggregations.
Consumption of species that do not feature in as great abundance in live fish exports from
Solomon Islands (P. leopardus, Variola louti and P. oligacanthus) did not feature
prominently in the diet of Marovo respondents. Around 50 percent of respondents reported
that these three species feature in their diet but only about five percent said that they
frequently eat them, regardless of spawning aggregations.
Almost all respondents from Roviana Lagoon (95 percent) reported that the three main
species feature in their diets (Figure 5.2). There was a substantial increase in the frequency of
consumption in the presence of seasonal spawning aggregations. Three quarters of Roviana
respondents reported eating P. areolatus and E. fuscoguttatus at least once per week during
the spawning season. About 60 percent consumed E. polyphekadion at least once per week
during this period. Outside of the spawning season, frequent consumption of P. areolatus fell
80
to 45 percent and just under 40 percent for E. fuscoguttatus and about a quarter of Roviana
respondents reported consuming E. polyphekadion at least once per week.
P. leopardus featured in the diet of three quarters of Roviana respondents. However, frequent
consumption of this species was restricted to 15 percent of respondents during the spawning
season and just six percent outside of this period. More than three quarters of Roviana
respondents indicated that V. louti did not feature in their diet at all, regardless of season. No
respondents reported eating this species, or P. oligacanthus, on a regular basis.
More than three quarters of respondents from Ontong Java reported that the three main
LRFFT target species feature in their diet. It is, however, instructive to note that substantial
differences exist in the dietary importance of LRFFT target species between different areas
within the atoll’s lagoon (refer to Chapter 8 (Section 8.2.5) for a more detailed examination of
this topic). During the spawning season, P. areolatus and E. fuscoguttatus form an integral
part of villager’s diet, with two thirds of respondents reporting eating them at least once per
week and more than half reporting the same frequency for E. polyphekadion. The frequency
of consumption of these species is markedly lower outside of the spawning season, when one
quarter of respondents reported eating P. areolatus at least once per week; 30 percent ate E.
polyphekadion on a regular basis; and slightly more than 35 percent ate E. fuscoguttatus at
least once per week.
Two thirds of Ontong Java respondents reported that P. leopardus featured in their diet during
the spawning season, compared to 45 percent outside of this period. During spawning, more
than 40 percent frequently consumed this species, compared to just 15 percent outside of this
period. Consumption of V. louti in Ontong Java surpassed, substantially, that of the other
regions that hosted the LRFFT. More than 90 percent of respondents reported that this species
features in their diet during the spawning season, with only a minor reduction outside of this
period. During the spawning season, more than 70 percent of people ate V. louti at least once
per week. This figure fell to 47 percent outside of the spawning season. P. oligacanthus
featured in the diets of more than half the respondents during the spawning season, when
about a third reported consuming the species regularly. This figure declined considerably
outside of this period.
81
Figure 5.2. Consumption and consumption frequency of LRFFT target species.
NB. Marovo Lagoon: n = 252; Roviana Lagoon: n = 128; and Ontong Java: n = 100
Consumption of LRFFT Target Species - Spawning Season
0
20
40
60
80
100
Plectropomus
areolatus
Epinephelus
polyphekadion
Epinephelus
fuscoguttatus
Plectropomus
leopardus
Variola louti Plectropomus
oligacanthus
Pe
rce
nt th
at e
at ta
rge
t sp
ecie
s
0
20
40
60
80
100
Pe
rce
nt th
at e
at "D
aily-t
o-W
ee
kly
"
Marovo % that eat target species Roviana % that eat target species Ontong Java % that eat target species
Marovo % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly" Roviana % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly" Ontong Java % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly"
Consumption of LRFFT Target Species - Non-Spawning Season
0
20
40
60
80
100
Plectropomus
areolatus
Epinephelus
polyphekadion
Epinephelus
fuscoguttatus
Plectropomus
leopardus
Variola louti Plectropomus
oligacanthus
Pe
rce
nt th
at e
at ta
rge
t sp
ecie
s
0
20
40
60
80
100
Pe
rce
nt th
at e
at "D
aily-t
o-W
ee
kly
"
Marovo % that eat target species Roviana % that eat target species Ontong Java % that eat target species
Marovo % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly" Roviana % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly" Ontong Java % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly"
82
5.5.6 Income and Expenditure
Income
Respondents were asked how much money they earned from sources that were determined
during the pilot survey. Questions related to how much money householders received from
each source and how many times, during 1999, this amount was received. This gave the
annual income by source for 1999. Money earned from the LRFFT was also attained and this
is included in Figure 5.3 to gauge the relative importance of the trade to the income of village
householders. Responses of zero income by source were used to deduce the level of
participation in each income source. For example, 76 percent of Marovo respondents recorded
zero income from the sale of bêche-de-mer in 1999. Consequently, participation in that
income source was recorded as 24 percent of the sample. Average earning is that calculated
by those that participated in that income source. The data were reduced into percentile ranges
(0-25%, 25-75% and 75-100%) so that the minority that earned small and large sums did not
overly affect the average income of the majority. Average income in each percentile range is
presented in Table 5.6, whilst Figure 5.3 illustrates the average income for the 25-75 percent
range, considered to be most characteristic of the income pattern in the respective regions.
The sources of income that attracted most attention from householders in Marovo Lagoon in
1999, as illustrated in Figure 5.3, included the sale of chilled finfish to intermediaries for the
Honiara market, gardening and farming, and the sale of artistic works, mostly wood carvings.
The highest average earnings in the 25-75 percent income bracket, however, were received by
the 28 percent that earned a wage and the 24 percent that had business interests in the lagoon.
Participants in the eskies fishery earned an average of just under $1,5001 in 1999. Nearly a
quarter of the Marovo respondents indicated that they dived for bêche-de-mer but the income
received from this fishery was minimal. The sale of garden produce contributed to the income
stream of some 84 percent of householders, yet the average income in the middle range was
just $908. Average income for the 43 percent that earned money from the sale of artworks
was $1,673. Table 5.6, however, indicates that the top 25 percent of income earners from this
source averaged $7,519.
1 All income and expenditure is reported in Solomon Island dollars (SI$1.00 = AU$0.37)
83
Figure 5.3. Income by source in the 25-75% range for the regions that hosted the LRFFT.
NB. Marovo Lagoon: n = 252; Roviana Lagoon: n = 128; and Ontong Java: n = 100
Remittances from a relative working elsewhere were received by 28 percent of Marovo
households and constituted an average of $558 in the middle-income bracket during 1999. For
the 45 percent of people that participated in the LRFFT, average income from the sale of live
fish was a modest $665. Table 5.6, however, indicates that the top 25 percent of income
earners from the trade averaged $4,400.
Respondents from Roviana Lagoon recorded participation in a diverse range of income
sources. Figure 5.3 indicates that just 16 percent fished for the chilled fish market, but the
average income was $1,764, which was about $300 more than their Marovo counterparts.
Nearly all of the respondents from Roviana earned an income from the sale of garden
produce. Income earned from this source averaged $3,028 in the middle bracket. The bêche-
de-mer fishery attracted 43 percent of respondents, but middle range returns averaged $805 in
1999. Similar figures applied to those who made money from the production of copra.
Remittances in Roviana Lagoon were received by more than half of the respondents with an
average total of $518 in the middle-income bracket. The largest incomes were received by the
38 percent that earned a wage. Wage earners in Roviana averaged $5,928 in the middle range
and $12,408 in the uppermost 25 percent income range (Table 5.6). The 27 percent of
Roviana respondents with business interests earned an average of just under $3,500 in 1999.
For the 51 percent that participated in the LRFFT, average income from the sale of live fish
Income and Income Sources
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
Eskies Beche-
de-mer
Trochus Copra Farming Art Wages Business Relative LRFFT
Pe
rce
nt th
at E
arn
ed
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
6,000
7,000
8,000
Av. In
co
me
- 2
5%
-75
% R
an
ge
Marovo Lagoon % that Earned Roviana Lagoon % that Earned Ontong Java % that Earned
Marovo Lagoon Income 25%-75% Roviana Lagoon Income 25%-75% Ontong Java Income 25%-75%
84
was a modest $1,106. Table 5.6, however, indicates that the top 25 percent of income earners
from the LRFFT averaged $4,234.
Ontong Java is characterised by a paucity of income earning opportunities. There is no market
for the sale of the finfish resource from the atoll and there is little opportunity for the sale of
garden produce on anything more than a small scale. The sources that attracted the most
participation by survey respondents were the bêche-de-mer fishery (94 percent), which netted
the middle-income earner an average of $2,378 in 1999, and the production of copra. Three
quarters of respondents produced copra, yet the returns in the 25-75 percentile averaged just
$796 in 1999. Table 5.6 indicates that income earners in the uppermost range averaged high
returns from both bêche-de-mer and copra. The nine percent that earned wages in Ontong
Java earned an average of $7,380 in the middle range. The 16 percent with business interests
on the atoll earned an average of $4,314 in 1999. Table 5.6 indicates that those who earned
the uppermost 25 percent from these sources earned substantially more money in 1999 than
the total income of the majority of respondents. Given the lack of income earning alternatives
on the atoll and the absence of a market for finfish, it is little wonder that 62 percent of
respondents earned money from the LRFFT. Average income in the middle bracket, however,
was just $528.
Table 5.6. Average income by source for the three regions that hosted the LRFFT.
Marovo Lagoon Roviana Lagoon Ontong Java
0-25% 25-75% 75-100% 0-25% 25-75% 75-100% 0-25% 25-75% 75-100%
Eskies 188 1,472 5,639 142 176 4,630 0 0 0
Bêche-de-mer 166 496 2,920 227 805 2,981 455 2,378 6,192
Trochus 33 168 1,033 59 263 929 0 0 0
Copra 105 448 1,250 282 843 2,800 267 796 3,276
Farming 183 908 3,707 820 3,028 6,412 58 259 420
Art 218 1,673 7,519 318 1,106 4,275 5 34 283
Wages 917 3,925 9,837 1,892 5,928 12,408 933 7,380 13,800
Business 389 1,225 10,411 665 3,465 7,286 75 4,314 12,600
Relative 167 558 1,647 197 518 1,628 140 421 1,075
Total 853 4,984 14,352 4,235 9,117 18,451 1,134 4,437 14,851
LRFFT 123 665 4,400 269 1,106 4,234 132 528 2,286
85
Expenditure
Respondents were asked how much money they spent in 1999 from expenditure categories
that were determined during the pilot survey. Questions related to how much money
householders spent on each category and how many times, during 1999, this amount was
spent. This gave the annual expenditure, by category, for 1999. Responses of zero expenditure
by category were used to deduce the level of participation in each expenditure source. The
data were reduced into percentile ranges (0-25%, 25-75% and 75-100%) so that the minority
that spent small and large sums did not overly affect the average expenditure of the majority.
Consistent with the format for income, average expenditure in each percentile range is
presented in Table 5.7, whilst Figure 5.4 illustrates the average expenditure for the 25-75
percent range, considered to be most characteristic of the expenditure pattern in the respective
regions.
Figure 5.4. Expenditure by source in the 25-75% range for the regions that hosted the LRFFT.
NB. Marovo Lagoon: n = 252; Roviana Lagoon: n = 128; and Ontong Java: n = 100
Figure 4.4 indicates that there was a consistent pattern of expenditure throughout the regions
that hosted the LRFFT. Throughout the three regions, the main destination for householder’s
money was found to be school fees and related expenses, fuel for transport and lighting, food
and tobacco. Average total expenditure was very similar across the regions, in contrast to the
disparity in income, particularly that which was received in Roviana Lagoon.
Expenditure and Expenditure Sources
0
20
40
60
80
100
School Church Marriage Fuel Food Clothing Medical Fishing Tobacco LRFFT
Pe
rce
nt th
at S
pen
t
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
Av. E
xp
en
d. -
25
%-7
5%
Ra
ng
e
Marovo Lagoon % that Spent Roviana Lagoon % that Spent Ontong Java % that Spent
Marovo Lagoon Expend. 25%-75% Roviana Lagoon Expend. 25%-75% Ontong Java Expend. 25%-75%
86
In Marovo Lagoon, 76 percent of respondents paid school fees in 1999 and whilst the amount
paid for schooling does not differ markedly to that experienced in Roviana Lagoon (see Table
5.7), it is noteworthy that substantial differences exist between the amounts paid for schooling
in different areas within the lagoon (refer to Chapter 6 (Section 6.2.6) for a more detailed
examination of this aspect). Contributions to the Church comprised an average of $295 for the
middle range in Marovo Lagoon. Table 5.7 indicates that such contributions are substantially
larger in Marovo than in the other regions that hosted the trade, particularly among the upper
25 percent of spending. Households in the 25-75 percent range in Marovo spent an average of
$1,732 on food.
In Roviana Lagoon, where the average household contains 7.34 people (Table 5.1), 91 percent
of households incurred school fees. The fees constitute one of the major expenditure items
faced by householders with a middle range expenditure average of $573 and upper range
average of $2,153 (Table 5.7). Fuel requirements in Roviana Lagoon incurred an average cost
of $679. Table 5.7 indicates that this requirement in the upper percentile range ($1,703) was
considerably less than that incurred in either Marovo Lagoon or Ontong Java. More money
was spent on food in the middle range in Roviana Lagoon, where the middle range of
spending averaged $2,059, establishing food as the largest expense incurred by village
households. Another substantial category of spending in Roviana proved to be tobacco, where
82 percent of respondents indicated that they spent some money on tobacco. In the middle
expenditure range, more money was spent on tobacco than on school fees, fuel and clothing.
School fees and related expenses were less expensive in Ontong Java, where 72 percent of
households incurred such costs. The average costs associated with sending children to school
in the middle and upper percentile ranges were up to a third of that which was spent in
Marovo and Roviana Lagoons (see Table 5.7). Money spent on food was less in Ontong Java
than in the other regions (Figure 5.4), and while similar amounts were spent on medically
related expenses, only 15 percent incurred such costs in 1999 compared to about half of the
respondents from Marovo and Roviana. More than two thirds of respondents spent money on
tobacco in 1999 but smokers in Ontong Java spent substantially less.
87
Table 5.7. Average expenditure by source for the three regions that hosted the LRFFT.
Marovo Lagoon Roviana Lagoon Ontong Java
0-25% 25-75% 75-100% 0-25% 25-75% 75-100% 0-25% 25-75% 75-100%
School 33 541 2,864 94 573 2,153 16 196 1,254
Church 63 295 1,193 33 92 321 8 46 300
Marriage 45 163 965 49 167 592 72 272 1,445
Fuel 145 466 1,789 216 679 1,703 65 667 2,304
Food 538 1,732 3,475 717 2,059 3,713 528 1,432 4,135
Clothing 42 179 674 69 282 673 96 335 986
Medical 14 107 662 8 88 577 15 67 525
Tobacco 19 94 1,134 22 68 209 20 60 379
Fishing 94 513 1,648 180 633 1,631 104 330 1,123
Total 1,676 4,097 9,249 2,017 4,558 9,154 1,162 3,610 8,424
LRFFT 9 56 540 38 103 260 55 150 375
5.5.7 Perceptions of Importance
Respondents were asked questions that related to a number of issues that were central to
gauging the potential acceptance of management of the LRFFT. The questions gauged
respondent’s perceptions regarding:
1. The grouper resource, in terms of providing food and income;
2. Spawning aggregations, in terms of protection and providing food and income;
3. The moratorium on the issue of live fish export licenses, and the lifting of the same;
4. Customary fishing rights and respect for such rights; and
5. Integration of modern management initiatives.
These questions sought answers on a scale of one to five from: “not important at all”; “not
very important”; “don’t know”; “reasonably important” to “important”. The overwhelming
majority of answers fell in to the categories at either end of this spectrum and few respondents
answered “don’t know”. Consequently, responses were collapsed to form categories of “not
important” and “important”. In this section, the percentage of respondents that answered,
“important” is reported.
Figure 5.5 describes the responses of “important” to five questions relating to grouper
spawning aggregations and the grouper resource.
88
Figure 5.5. Respondents in the three regions that hosted the LRFFT that believed issues
surrounding spawning aggregations were important.
NB. Sample size pertaining to Figure 5.5.
Marovo Roviana Ontong Java
Spawning aggregations to having groupers in the future 76 128 100
Fishing in passages during spawning season to feed the family 76 128 100
Fishing in passages during spawning season to make money 76 128 100
Not fishing in passages during spawning season 172 128 100
Protected areas i.e. No fishing 174 128 100
Respondents from Roviana Lagoon and Ontong Java overwhelmingly believed that spawning
aggregations were important to having groupers in the future. Two thirds of those from
Marovo Lagoon agreed, however, by implication, one third did not see the aggregations as
important for maintaining the resource into the future. Around half of Marovo and Roviana
respondents believe it is important to fish in spawning aggregations. Just 21 percent of
Ontong Java respondents take that view. Nearly 60 percent of Marovo respondents believe it
is important to target spawning aggregations in order to make money. A quarter of Roviana
respondents and just 15 percent of Ontong Java respondents take that view. Around 90
percent of respondents from Roviana and Ontong Java believe it is important to avoid fishing
in deepwater passages during the spawning season. Less than 70 percent from Marovo share
this view, indicating that more than 30 percent do not believe it is important. Most
0
20
40
60
80
100
Spawning
aggregations to
having groupers
in the future
Fishing in
passages during
spawning season
to feed the family
Fishing in
passages during
spawning season
to make money
Not fishing in
passages during
the spawning
season
Protected areas
ie. no fishing
Responses o
f "I
mport
ant"
(%
) Marovo Lagoon
Roviana Lagoon
Ontong Java
89
respondents from throughout the three regions that hosted the LRFFT believe that it is
important to set aside areas where no fishing is allowed. The implication from these results is
that while more than half the Marovo respondents believe that fishing in seasonal spawning
aggregations is detrimental to future resource stocks, both for providing food and income,
there remains a substantial proportion that are not convinced of this. Most Roviana
respondents believe that the aggregations are important and that protection should be afforded
to these sites. However, the sites are still important for food and some people still wish to
exploit them for money. Respondents from Ontong Java recognise the importance of the
aggregations. Few see it as important to exploit the aggregations for food or money and most
believe that the aggregations should be afforded protection against fishing.
Figure 5.6 describes perceptions of importance from respondents with regard to the use of
customary resource management systems, the imposition of the moratorium on the issue of
new live fish export licenses, and the adoption of modern fisheries management techniques.
Around three quarters of Marovo respondents described customary rights to fishing areas and
respecting these rights as important. Two thirds of Roviana respondents subscribed to that
view. In this regard, there is an element within the two Western Province lagoons that do not
regard the system of customary rights as important. Almost all respondents in Ontong Java
believed that these rights and respecting them were important, which establishes a sound
foundation on which community-based co-management can proceed. About 60 percent of
Marovo respondent recognised the importance of the moratorium and just over half said that it
was important that the moratorium be lifted. More than 70 percent of respondents from
Roviana Lagoon considered the moratorium to be important and just a quarter said that it was
important to lift it, implying that three quarters saw it as important to retain the moratorium.
In Ontong Java, more than 90 percent recognized the importance of the moratorium and less
than half thought it was important to lift it. Two thirds of respondents from Marovo and
Roviana Lagoons considered adopting modern fisheries management to be important, whereas
just one third of Ontong Java thought it to be important.
90
Figure 5.6. Respondents in the three regions that hosted the LRFFT that believed issues
surrounding management were important.
NB. Sample size pertaining to Figure 5.6.
Marovo Roviana Ontong Java
Customary rights regarding fishing areas 174 128 100
Respect for customary rights 174 128 100
The moratorium banning live fish exports 175 128 100
Lifting the moratorium 174 128 100
Adopting modern fisheries management 76 128 100
5.6 Discussion of Inter regional Results
It is clear from the results of the household survey that the LRFFT, and the resources at the
centre of the trade, have varying levels of importance to villagers throughout the three regions
that hosted the trade prior to the moratorium. The grouper resource, or more specifically, the
species that aggregate to spawn in overlapping variables of time and space, are at risk of
serious depletion by intensively targeting the widely known aggregation sites during the
season and lunar phase during which such aggregations occur. The political will associated
with the conservation of this resource is, in part, generated by the significance of the resource
to the people in question. Another important influence affecting the extent to which villagers
participate in the trade is the number of income earning opportunities available to them and
0
20
40
60
80
100
Customary rights
regarding fishing
areas
Respect for
customary rights
The moratorium
banning live fish
export
Lifting the
moratorium
Adopting modern
fisheries
management
Responses o
f "I
mport
ant"
(%
)Marovo Lagoon
Roviana Lagoon
Ontong Java
91
the income generating potential of each source that is available. The strength and support for
traditional means of managing fisheries resources also affects the potential for success of
establishing a plan of management for the LRFFT.
5.6.1 Impact of the LRFFT on Village Households
The household survey sought to describe the prevailing socio-economic conditions in the
regions that hosted the trade and to gauge the impacts; both experienced and potential that
accompanies participation in the trade. Fishing effort during the LRFFT, which would have
been more accurately quantified via a creel survey had that been possible, indicated that
respondents dedicated extraordinary hours to the trade. This is due mostly to the fact that the
trade operated on a limited time frame in each area, a time frame that coincided with the
occurrence of seasonal spawning aggregations of the target species. Table 5.2 illustrates that
average weekly fishing effort during the LRFFT in Marovo and Roviana lagoons was about
30 hours. In Ontong Java, it was more than 43 hours. This is a dramatic increase in fishing
effort from that normally exerted, and this investment of time was found to result in an impact
on the attention paid to normal household duties and activities of a cultural nature.
Many fishers, primarily in Ontong Java, and to a lesser extent in Marovo and Roviana
Lagoons, established camps on islands in close proximity to spawning aggregation sites. In
Marovo Lagoon, whole families might relocate to the camps during the week as women
participated in the trade also. In Ontong Java, however, only the men fished. The LRFFT
dominated the men’s weekly activity during this time. Men would often return to the village
on weekends, bringing with them any remaining bycatch. The impact of this increase in time
investment resulted in a marked fall in the rate of participation in the household activities
nominated in the questionnaire. Figure 5.1 indicates that, in Marovo and Roviana lagoons,
where for the most part, fishers returned to the village after fishing each day, participation in
household activities such as gardening and conducting maintenance and repair work to the
dwelling declined considerably. In Marovo Lagoon, work on the famous wood carving
declined while carvers fished in the trade and there was even a decline in the level of
participation in teaching children traditional knowledge. Adherence to religious beliefs and
attendance at Church did not decline very much during the LRFFT for respondents from
Marovo or Roviana lagoons.
In Ontong Java, where income earning opportunities are limited, men dedicated their efforts
to the LRFFT. Figure 5.1 clearly illustrates that all nominated activities showed a dramatic
92
decrease in participation during the LRFFT, mainly because the men were not in the village
for most of the week. In this regard, it is difficult to quantify how this absence affected the
activities of women in Ontong Java because, as mentioned previously, male respondents
could only guess as to the activities of their wives while they were camped on a remote island.
The absence of a male role model for children and the need for upkeep to high maintenance
dwellings, however, is a considerable by-product of the LRFFT as it previously functioned.
This by-product adds weight to the argument that the LRFFT would be more sustainably
structured if it was in operation year round, with the exception that the spawning aggregation
sites be closed to fishing during the period of peak spawning activity. To structure the trade in
this manner would reduce the impact, not only on the resource base, but also on the normal
functioning of village households, including the division of labour.
5.6.2 Chilled Fishery
The fishery that ships chilled fish in eskies to the municipal market in Honiara provides
income for half of the respondents from Marovo Lagoon and just 15 percent of respondents
from Roviana Lagoon. Table 5.3 indicates that an average of little more than 11 hours per
week are dedicated to the fishery in Marovo Lagoon and about one full day is spent fishing
for the eskies fishery in Roviana Lagoon. In Marovo Lagoon, in particular, there is potential
to combine the eskies fishery with the LRFFT by using the facilities at the Fisheries Centre in
Seghe. The establishment of a shore-based transhipment facility in Honiara that handled
domestic shipments from regions where the LRFFT operates, prior to export by airfreight,
could operate year-round. The shipments in the chilled finfishery would thereby increase
because a component of the shipment to the shore-based facility would be LRFFT bycatch,
which could then be transported to the municipal market. In this way, there would be little
post-harvest mortality from fish retained for long periods of time in net cages or from a long
sea voyage to Hong Kong. The fisher, the intermediary and the LRFFT operator would be
able to value add by receiving an income from two fisheries simultaneously.
In Roviana Lagoon, access to the markets in Munda provides fishers with a point of sale for
finfish resources. There is a fisheries centre that buys fish from village fishers and sells them
on to townsfolk. There is also a resort that buys a limited number of fish. Table 5.3 indicates
that the fishers that participated in the “eskies” fishery did so for little more than half of the
year in 1999. The extent of the effort applied to the fishery is indicative of the fact that there
is no electricity for refrigeration and that fishers use the fishery to supplement their income.
As with the case in Marovo Lagoon, potential exists in Roviana to develop this fishery
93
further, in conjunction with transport arrangements for a LRFFT that is managed around air
freighting of the live catch. The remote location of Ontong Java precluded involvement in the
chilled finfishery as sea transport is infrequent and the journey long.
5.6.3 Significance of the LRFFT Target Species
An important component of the political will required to consciously act to conserve the
grouper resource can be gauged by measuring the significance of the target species to the diet
of those that would exploit the resource for money. Results depicted in Figure 5.2 show that
in Marovo Lagoon, the three major species, Plectropomus areolatus, Epinephelus
polyphekadion and E. fuscoguttatus, feature in the diet of 60-70 percent of respondents, but
only about 20 percent report eating the species at least once per week, whether the species are
aggregating to spawn or not. Species of lesser importance to the trade in Solomon Islands (P.
leopardus, Variola louti and P. oligacanthus) feature in less than half of Marovo respondents’
diet and less than 10 percent eat these species on a frequent basis.
The most prevalent form of transportation in Marovo Lagoon is wooden paddle canoe. In
some instances, the distances from villages to deepwater passages that might host grouper
spawning aggregations are prohibitive. Given that these three species do not feature
prominently in the diet of Marovo villagers, the will to act to conserve the grouper resource as
an important food source is diminished and might enhance the desire to exploit the resource as
an income source. Either way, overexploitation of the seasonal spawning aggregations cannot
be sustained and the need to extend that message to village communities cannot be overstated.
Marovo fishers are, however, eager to see a more equitable return for their live catch, stating
that they think the LRFFT operator should pay $20/kg to both the individual fisher and for the
village royalty (Table 5.1). Perhaps this not a realistic expectation but it does demonstrate the
indignation felt by fishers toward the price paid for the live fish being offered by the operator
prior to the moratorium.
Almost all Roviana Lagoon respondents reported that the three key target species feature in
their diet. Consumption frequency of these species increased substantially during the
spawning season, indicating that fishers target the aggregations for the purpose of feeding
their household. Few respondents reported eating the lesser three species more than once per
week, regardless of season. In addition, very few ate V. louti, in particular. Given the range of
income earning opportunities in Roviana Lagoon (see Figure 5.3) and the prevalence of the
main LRFFT target species in the diet of villagers, as illustrated in Figure 5.2, it might be
94
concluded that fishers in Roviana Lagoon would be less than emphatic in their willingness to
again fish in the LRFFT in the manner that the trade was previously practiced. Table 5.1
indicated that Roviana respondents want the LRFFT operator to pay $20/kg to the fisher and a
further $18/kg to the village in the form of royalty. This indicates a reticence to see the trade
re-established in its previous form.
Results presented in Figure 5.2 regarding Ontong Java are atypical for the atoll as a whole due
to the substantial disparity that exists between the two communities in relation to consumption
of LRFFT target species (refer to Chapter 8 (Section 8.2.5) for a more detailed examination of
this difference). Generally speaking, however, the species commonly targeted for the LRFFT
do feature prominently in the diets of villagers from Ontong Java, although more so in the
diets of people from the Luaniua community. This, together with the dearth of income earning
opportunities, might explain the zeal with which Pelau respondents participated in the
LRFFT.
5.6.4 Income Earning Opportunities and the Cost of Living
Pressure for integration into the cash economy is ever-increasing in Solomon Islands. School
fees, food and fuel for transport and lighting comprise regular costs to the household that must
be supported by regular income. Added to this, tobacco smoking is widespread in the three
regions that hosted the LRFFT, particularly in Roviana Lagoon. Expenses associated with
smoking are often comparable with that which is spent on sending children to school (see
Figure 5.4). Opportunities to achieve the income required to meet household expenditure
varied across the three regions.
Half of the respondents in Marovo Lagoon participated in the “eskies” fishery. The fishery is
poorly developed due to the absence of electricity for refrigeration and the frequency of
shipping. Table 5.3 indicates that the median number of months in 1999 that Marovo
respondents participated in the fishery accounted for just half the year, and slightly more for
the 15 percent of Roviana respondents that participated in the eskies fishery. Potential exists
for expansion of this fishery through shipping chilled fish to Honiara in conjunction with
regular shipments of live fish for the LRFFT. This would entail the utilisation of the regional
Fisheries Centres for purposes of refrigerated storage, and would facilitate participation in the
fishery on a year-round basis. Development of the eskies fishery such that the income stream
is consistent throughout the year might negate the apparent zeal with which fishers
participated in the live fishery prior to the moratorium.
95
In Ontong Java, where there is no market for the finfish resource, the re-establishment of the
LRFFT in a manner that is sustainable will not only provide villagers with a consistent
income stream throughout the year but will also serve to relieve pressure on stocks of bêche-
de-mer and trochus. Regular shipments of live fish to Honiara for airfreight might also lead to
the development of an eskies fishery for the atoll. Clearly, the paucity of income earning
opportunities in Ontong Java, and the poor return from copra production, suggests that
appropriate development of finfisheries, both live and chilled, would benefit the people of the
atoll while spreading the extent of exploitation across a number of marine resources.
The sale of garden produce remains an important source of income for many people in
Marovo and Roviana lagoons. Figure 5.3 indicates, however, that for the 84 percent of
Marovo respondents who earned an income from this source, the average return in the middle
range was a modest $908. Produce is sold at small markets in Marovo Lagoon such as the one
at Batuna. Villagers transport their produce to the market from nearby villages in wooden
paddle canoes and the commodities sell quickly. Pricing is very competitive. In Roviana
Lagoon, almost all respondents earned money from the sale of garden produce but the average
return in the middle range exceeded $3,000. The market environment is different in Roviana
than in Marovo Lagoon. Villagers can transport produce to markets in Munda, and supply
retail outlets in the town or the tourist resorts. On the low lying coral isles in Ontong Java,
garden produce is grown on a small scale, often just for subsistence purposes.
An important component of cultural identity in Marovo Lagoon, in particular, is the
production of ornate wood carvings. This art form is practiced widely in Western Province but
is most highly concentrated among the SDA villages in Marovo Lagoon. More than 40
percent of Marovo respondents stated that income is generated in this manner. Table 5.6
indicates that the majority of carvers, those in the 25-75 percentile, earned an average of
$1,673, which is marginally more than was earned on average in the eskies fishery. The upper
25 percent of villagers who earned an income from carving averaged more than $7,500. Aside
from the important cultural identification attached to the production of the wood carving, it is
also an important source of income for a substantial proportion of the population. During the
operation of the LRFFT, however, just 20 percent of Marovo respondents dedicated any time
to carving and those that did spent about 10 hours per week less than they did in the absence
of the trade (Figure 5.1).
More than 45 percent of Marovo respondents fished in the LRFFT. However, average income
received in the 25-75 percentile was just $665. Clearly, the limited period that fishers were
96
exposed to live fish buyers during the LRFFT encouraged villagers to literally drop
everything and dedicate their time to fishing for the trade. The returns to the majority of
LRFFT participants for so doing did not justify the time commitment and it might be argued
that the income derived did not justify the disruption to normal daily life. The upper 25
percent of earners in the LRFFT did, however, gain substantial benefit from fishing in the
trade, with fishers in Marovo and Roviana Lagoons averaging well over $4,000 in the period
that the trade operated. The most successful fishers in Ontong Java did not register such high
returns. Average returns in the upper 25 percent of earners was $2,286, which is even more
surprising given the extent of fishing effort exerted during the LRFFT. Ontong Java
participants averaged more than 43 hours per week while their counterparts from Marovo and
Roviana Lagoons averaged about 30 hours per week (see Table 5.2). Therefore, Ontong Java
fishers worked much harder for lower returns than those from the other two lagoon sites
surveyed in this study.
While much of the population is employed in the subsistence sector, a less traditional
commercial economy is growing. Those that earn a wage or have business interests earned
substantial income, relative to other sources. More than a quarter of Marovo respondents
earned a wage in 1999. Average earnings in the 25-75 percentile were just less than $4,000. In
Roviana Lagoon, where commercial interests in Munda and the cannery at Noro employ
many people, 38 percent of respondents earned a wage. Average wage earnings in the mid
range were just less than $6,000, with the upper 25 percent of wage earners averaging
$12,400 (Table 5.6). In Ontong Java, just nine percent earned a wage but for those that did,
average returns were higher than the other study areas. Similarly, those with business interests
in the three regions generated a higher average income than those that earned a living from
the more traditional means of fishing or exploiting marine resources in general.
The growing reliance on earning an income in order to maintain a standard of living
characterised, in part, by formal education for children and rising consumption of imported
packaged foods has seen the emergence of a fledgling level of industrialisation in rural areas.
A growing number of villagers are engaging in wage employment and business activities to
achieve income levels and security that might not otherwise be realised by more traditional
means. As lifestyles change from subsistence to cash-driven societies reliant on budgetary
assistance and remittances, the traditional dependence on natural resources for daily needs
remains. The importance of these resources to the villagers themselves should guide the
political will necessary for the success of management prescriptions.
97
5.6.5 The Grouper Resource and its Management
Responses to questions regarding the importance of the grouper resource and the manner in
which it is managed in the wake of its importance to the LRFFT, demonstrated some variation
in attitudes between the three regions that hosted the trade. Figure 5.5 indicates that while it
was widely understood in Roviana Lagoon and Ontong Java that the occurrence of spawning
aggregations was important to having grouper species in the future, this was not reflected in
the results received from respondents in Marovo Lagoon. Little more than 60 percent
recognised the importance of such aggregations to having groupers in the future. This reflects
an acceptance by some of the regenerative capacity of the aggregations in the light of
subsistence exploitation but not of the effect of disproportionate effort that accompanies
participation in the LRFFT. Community education programmes relating to the LRFFT must
emphasise that intensive fishing in the spawning aggregations leads to their demise.
Highlighting the price disparity between that received by fishers and that paid by diners in
Hong Kong might rally fishers, but the real issue is that regardless of the price received, the
focus on spawning aggregations will deplete the resource beyond critical levels.
In Marovo and Roviana Lagoons, more than half of the respondents indicated that it was
important to fish in deep water passages in order to feed their family. Just 20 percent of
Ontong Java respondents indicated this. Proximity to passages is an important issue in that
subsistence fishing activities are normally conducted from wooden paddle canoes. In Ontong
Java, deep water passages are often beyond the distance that most fishers are willing to
paddle. Those with outboard motors are keenly aware of the costs associated with their use
and the paucity of opportunities to make the money to meet such costs. This question was
asked to gauge the impact of proposed seasonal closures of spawning aggregation sites on the
normal subsistence fishing activities. About half the respondents from Marovo and Roviana
would be temporarily affected by such closures.
Around 60 percent of Marovo respondents indicated that it was important to fish in deep
water passages during the spawning season to make money. This question was asked to gauge
the reliance on such activities for meeting cash needs. Figure 5.5 indicates that the majority of
respondents from Roviana Lagoon and Ontong Java would not be affected by seasonal
closures. Respondents from Roviana Lagoon have a range of income sources and those from
Ontong Java have no market for finfish resources.
98
Importantly, the overwhelming majority of respondents from the three regions that hosted the
LRFFT recognised the importance of not fishing in the passages during the spawning season.
This is not to say that the subsistence fishery depletes such aggregations. It does, however,
imply a willingness to accept the wisdom behind temporary closures of deepwater passages
that are known to host grouper spawning aggregations. Establishment of protected areas
where no fishing is permitted was also widely seen as important. In Ontong Java, such a
protected area has been established and respect for the sanctity of the area is widespread
among community members who stand to benefit from the area in its capacity as a nursery.
Figure 5.6 indicates that respondents from Ontong Java have a strong bond with the
traditional customary rights and associated rules that govern them. Nearly all Ontong Java
respondents indicated that the customary rights regarding fishing areas, and the respect for
such rights, was important. Furthermore, just a third of Ontong Java respondents indicated
that adopting modern fisheries management techniques was important, about half the number
from Marovo and Roviana Lagoons. The overwhelming majority of respondents believed that
the moratorium was important but now, about a half believes that it should be lifted. The
prospects for sustainable management of the LRFFT in Ontong Java are very good. A paucity
of income earning opportunities has made people there willing participants in the trade, yet
strong and wise leadership, together with widespread respect for customs and tradition, set a
firm platform upon which the LRFFT might be conducted on a sustainable basis.
Respondents from Marovo and Roviana Lagoons, on the other hand, were less vehement in
their support for customary management, respect for such systems, or the moratorium.
However, the majority of respondents, particularly those from Marovo Lagoon, indicated that
customary rights regarding fishing, and respect for such rights, was important. It does indicate
that about a quarter of respondents did not believe these things to be important, reflecting
some sort of erosion of traditional authority, particularly in Roviana Lagoon. Little more than
half of Marovo respondents viewed the moratorium as important while little less than half
thought that it was important to lift it. This reflects the limited income earning opportunities
in the lagoon and the lack of importance of the resource as a food source. More SDA
respondents in Marovo saw lifting the moratorium as important than those that thought
imposing it was important. In that part of the lagoon, expenditure commitments for schooling
and fuel were more demanding. See Chapter 6 (Section 6.2.7) for further detail.
A range of income earning opportunities in Roviana lagoon is reflected in Figure 5.6. Two
thirds of Roviana respondents thought it was important for the moratorium to be imposed,
99
whereas just a quarter thought lifting it was important. There are other ways of making a
living so there is no desperation to see the trade reinstated unless it is to their liking. Like
Marovo, Roviana respondents saw importance in adopting modern fisheries management
techniques. The reinstatement of the trade in Roviana has potential for success so long as
seasonal closures of spawning aggregation sites are fully observed. Integration with chilled
fish exports to Honiara should also be considered.
100
Chapter 6: Socio-economics and the Impact of the LRFFT in Marovo
Lagoon
6.1 Introduction
Marovo Lagoon is essentially an expanse of inland sea of around 700 km2, bounded by a
raised barrier reef intersected by deepwater passages that connect the lagoon with the open
sea (Figure 6.1). Throughout the Marovo area, a reasonably uniform system of territorial
holdings and resource tenure operates. These localised kinship groups act as corporate units,
controlling a defined area of land and sea and the reefs and resources contained therein
(Hviding and Baines, 1994). Hviding (1996) describes the intricacies of this system of tenure,
and a synopsis of the customary means of managing natural resources is included in Chapter
8. Three Church denominations are represented (Seventh Day Adventist, United Church and
Christian Fellowship Church), and their teachings provide a basis for some of the
organisational and economic variation between communities. The results and discussion that
follow divide the 11,000-strong population of the lagoon along these lines as there is
geographical distinction accompanying religious adherence. It is important to note that the
people of Telina village, aligned with the SDA Church, chose not to participate in the survey.
Participating villages are listed in Table 6.1.
101
Figure 6.1. Marovo Lagoon, Western Province.
102
Table 6.1. Participating villages and their religious affiliations.
Seventh Day Adventist United Church Christian Fellowship Church
Village No. Households Village No. Households Village No. Households
Sombiro 8 Rukutu 8 Kolombaghea 7
Mbili 8 Chubikopi 16 Keru 8
Tengomo 1 Gepae 2 Bunabunasa 6
Mbunikalo 2 Michi 10
Kokete 8 Vakambo 10
Manabuso 5 Onne 6
Ketoketo 7 Abu 2
Honggitasina 3 Chuchulu 6
Rakata 8 Newland 6
Lolovuro 6 Patutiva 22
Bisuana 8 Nazareth 14
Cheke 8
Chea 8
Sasaghana 12
Ramata 10
Baini 7
Bareho 10
Mbunitusa 10
Telina* 0
TOTAL 129 TOTAL 102 TOTAL 21
* Chose not to participate in the survey.
6.2 Results
6.2.1 Sample Description
Householders that are affiliated with the Seventh Day Adventist (SDA) and United Churches
(UC) comprise the majority of the population of Marovo Lagoon. Table 6.2 indicates that half
the respondents were affiliated with the SDA Church, about 40 percent with the UC and about
10 percent belonged to the Christian Fellowship Church (CFC). More than half of the SDA
respondents fished in the LRFFT, whilst little more than a third of the UC respondents did so.
The average income in 1999 of SDA respondents in the 25-75 percentile was almost $1,200
higher than the average for the whole of Marovo Lagoon, whereas the average income of CFC
103
respondents was $2,462 less than the lagoon average. A narrow margin exists between
average income and average expenditure throughout the lagoon for the majority of income
earners (those in the 25-75 percentile). Table 6.2 indicates that middle-income returns for
LRFFT participants were highest in the SDA part of the lagoon.
Bycatch from the LRFFT was highest in UC villages where the company (Ika Holdings)
bought little more than half of the catch from fishers. Three quarters of the bycatch in this
area was taken back to villages. Around two thirds of the live catch from SDA respondents
was purchased by the operator and about half of the bycatch was consumed in the village.
More than 15 percent of the bycatch was taken to fisher’s camps in close proximity to
spawning aggregation sites.
Table 6.2. Characteristics of the sample in Marovo Lagoon.
Marovo Lagoon SDA UC CFC
% Households Surveyed 25 25 25
No. Respondents 128 (50.8% of ML tot) 100 (39.7% of ML tot) 24 (9.5% of ML tot)
Av. Size of Household 6.3 6.9 7.0
Av. Age of Respondent 42.3 42.1 32.5
Fished in the LRFFT 68 (53.1% of SDA tot) 35 (35.0% of UC tot) 12 (50.0% of CFC tot)
Mean Income and Expend - 1999 Income Expend. Income Expend. Income Expend.
0% to 25% range ($) 1,136 1,985 790 2,033 358 623
25% to 75% range ($) 6,158 4,623 4,383 3,887 2,522 1,772
75% to 100% range ($) 15,600 10,041 13,657 8,039 8,510 5,991
Mean Income and Expend - LRFFT Income Expend. Income Expend. Income Expend.
0% to 25% range ($) 215 14 162 9 37 5
25% to 75% range ($) 1,102 67 595 41 126 10
75% to 100% range ($) 5,668 553 3,455 296 250 18
Extent of LRFFT Bycatch Mean Mean Mean
% of the catch that Co. bought 65.5 57.7 78.2
Bycatch Use (%) Mean Mean Mean
Taken to the village 50.4 75.1 48.3
Eaten at fishers camp 15.6 7.4 11.7
Sold at a market 12.8 0.6 21.7
Fed to captive live fish 4.6 5.4 1.7
Discarded 3.5 0.0 0.0
Released 0.0 0.0 0.0
Price Responsiveness Median Median Median
Co. should pay the fisher ($/kg) 15.00 20.00 27.50
Co. should pay the village ($/kg) 15.00 75.00 -
104
6.2.2 Activities of the Household
Throughout Marovo Lagoon, the level of participation in everyday household activities and
the number of hours dedicated per week was substantially reduced during the operation of the
LRFFT. Figure 6.2 illustrates the level of participation in certain household activities in the
presence and absence of the LRFFT and illustrates the difference in the amount of time
dedicated to such tasks by those that did undertake them.
Figure 6.2 indicates that participation in gardening activity by men and women from SDA
villages was reduced during the LRFFT. Those that did participate in gardening spent six
hours per week less than they did during the LRFFT. House repairs were undertaken by just
18 percent of SDA men during the LRFFT compared to more than 50 percent in 1999. Less
time was spent on this task also as both men and women dedicated much of their time to
fishing for the LRFFT. Marovo Lagoon in general and the SDA community in particular, is
renowned for wood carvings. In 1999, nearly three quarters of SDA men spent an average of
27 hours per week undertaking this activity. During the LRFFT, just one third undertook their
traditional art, spending 17 hours per week. About half of the SDA women who participated
in the production of the carvings in 1999 did so during the LRFFT. Teaching children
traditional knowledge was found to be an activity that two thirds of SDA men undertook in
1999 but only one third did so during the LRFFT. There was little alteration to the regimen of
Church attendance by respondents from SDA villages between the 1999 and LRFFT periods.
Less than half of the UC respondents that gardened in 1999 participated in the activity during
the LRFFT. UC women that participated in gardening activity during the LRFFT spent more
time on the task than they did in 1999, an indication that some compensation was required due
to the absence of the men. House repairs and maintenance were conducted by less than four
percent of UC men during the LRFFT. These men spent an average of just three hours per
week on the task. In 1999, about half of the men spent an average of more than 17 hours per
week. Whilst the production of artworks is not as extensive among the UC community as the
SDA, more than 16 percent of UC men undertook the activity for an average of just under 15
hours per week. During the LRFFT, participation declined slightly, but those that did
participate spent just four hours per week on artworks. Less UC men taught their children
traditional knowledge during the LRFFT than in 1999, but slightly more women took on this
role during the LRFFT. Again, there was little alteration to the regimen of Church attendance
by respondents from UC villages.Whilst the sample size (n values) for the CFC villages is
small, a broad indication can be attained from the comparisons used for the other
105
communities. Around half the number of CFC men participated in gardening during the
LRFFT than did so in 1999, and those that did spent less time doing so. Participation by
women in this activity suffered a 60 percent decline during the LRFFT. Conducting repairs
and maintenance to dwellings attracted little attention from CFC men during the LRFFT
compared to a participation rate of almost 80 percent in 1999. Copra is produced in the area of
Marovo Lagoon populated mostly by people with CFC affiliation.
106
Figure 6.2. Householder participation and hours spent per week conducting particular
activities in the presence and absence of the LRFFT in Marovo Lagoon.
NB. Sample size pertaining to Figure 6.2.
n Men Women
1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT
SDA 127 56 128 32
UC 98 27 99 14
CFC 24 8 23 5
SDA - Men
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
Pa
rtic
ipa
tio
n (
%)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
SDA - Women
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Ho
urs
pe
r W
ee
k
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
UC - Men
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
Pa
rtic
ipa
tio
n (
%)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
UC - Women
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Ho
urs
pe
r W
ee
k
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
CFC - Men
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
Pa
rtic
ipa
tio
n (
%)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
CFC - Women
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Ho
urs
pe
r W
ee
k1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
107
In 1999, almost 17 percent of CFC men spent an average of about 35 hours per week
undertaking this activity. During the LRFFT, participation declined slightly but the time
dedicated to the task fell to 14 hours per week. No CFC women produced copra during the
LRFFT. Women’s regimen of Church attendance was altered during the LRFFT more than
that of men. Attendance at Church by CFC women suffered a 20 percent decline during this
time and the average amount of time dedicated to Church activities also fell. CFC men, on the
other hand spent marginally more time in Church during the LRFFT than they did in 1999.
6.2.3 Fishing Effort
Table 6.3 indicates that respondents from the UC villages exerted more individual fishing
effort during the LRFFT than respondents from the SDA or CFC villages. Fishing effort in the
household fishery varied little throughout the lagoon, with respondents generally making two
or three trips per week for an average duration of two or three hours. There was a dramatic
increase, in all three sections of the lagoon, in weekly fishing activity during the operation of
the LRFFT compared with during 1999. UC respondents reported median weekly fishing
effort during the LRFFT of 36 hours (average of 37.2 hours). Results from SDA villages
recorded a median score of 24 hours per week (average of 32.5 hours) during the LRFFT.
Weekly fishing effort for respondents from CFC villages was substantially less than that of
SDA and UC villages during the LRFFT (see Table 6.3).
Table 6.3. Comparison of fishing effort in 1999 and during the LRFFT in Marovo Lagoon.
Marovo Lagoon No. householders No. trips/wk No. hrs/trip No. hrs/wk
1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT
SDA n 128 68 126 67 125 68 125 67
Mean 3.1 2.2 2.9 4.8 2.9 6.7 7.5 32.5
Median 2.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 3.0 6.0 6.00 24.0
UC n 100 35 97 33 95 33 95 32
Mean 3.0 2.3 3.5 4.5 2.6 7.9 9.2 37.2
Median 2.0 2.0 3.0 5.0 2.0 8.0 8.0 36.0
CFC n 24 12 24 12 24 12 24 12
Mean 2.1 2.7 3.5 2.8 2.2 5.4 7.5 15.2
Median 2.0 2.0 3.0 2.0 2.0 4.0 8.0 11.0
The fishery that ships chilled fish in eskies to Honiara played an integral role in the lives of
respondents from SDA villages. Table 6.4 indicates that almost two thirds of SDA
respondents fished in the fishery and did so for an average of more than seven months in
108
1999, although more than 40 percent reported that they fished in the eskies fishery throughout
the year. SDA villagers that fished in this fishery dedicated about two full days per week to
the fishery. Respondents from UC villages participated in the fishery to a lesser extent. More
than half of participating UC respondents indicated that they participated for three months or
less in 1999. Those that did join this fishery, again, dedicated about two full days per week to
the fishery. CFC respondents provided an insufficient sample size from which conclusions
can be drawn about participation in the eskies fishery.
Table 6.4. Fishing effort in the “Eskies” fishery from Marovo Lagoon to Honiara.
Eskies fishery -
1999 Participation No. months H/holders Trips/wk Hrs/trip Hrs/wk
SDA n 63. 8% 83 83 81 83 81
Mean 7.5 2.4 1.8 6.9 11.6
Median 7.0 2.0 2.0 6.0 12.0
UC n 37.0% 38 37 37 38 37
Mean 5.8 2.0 1.2 9.1 11.4
Median 3.0 2.0 1.0 8.0 10.0
CFC n 4 4 4 4 4
Mean 4.8 2.8 1. 12.0 12.0
Median
16.7%
3.0 1.0 1.0 12.0 12.0
6.2.4 Fishing Catch
Table 6.5 indicates that fishers from both SDA and UC villages recorded similar catch rates of
around a dozen fish per trip whilst fishing for the household. The grouper component of this
catch was not dissimilar at three or four groupers per trip. The sample size for the LRFFT
catch is small but some indication can be gained as to the characteristics of the catch. SDA
participants in the LRFFT caught marginally more fish whilst fishing for the trade than they
did while fishing for the household, even though average trip duration during the LRFFT was
double that dedicated to the household fishing effort. UC fishers in the LRFFT caught
substantially less fish per trip than they did while fishing for the household, even though
average trip duration during the LRFFT was up to four times that dedicated to the household
fishing effort. The grouper component of the catch during the LRFFT was very high.
However, given that the bycatch during this time represented about 40 percent (Table 6.2), it
can be assumed that some of the groupers caught were not species that the operator was
buying.
109
Table 6.5. Comparison of total catch, and the component of which were groupers, between
fishing activity in 1999 and during the LRFFT in Marovo Lagoon.
Marovo Lagoon Total no. fish caught per
trip
No. groupers caught per
trip Grouper proportion of catch
1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT
SDA n 20 10 20 10
Mean 16. 14.2 3.5 13.0 20.8% 91.6%
Median 12.0 15. 3.0 13.5
UC n 54 5 53 5
Mean 14.7 7.2 4.2 6.0 28.6% 83.3%
Median 12.0 7.0 3.0 6.0
CFC Insufficient Data
Fishers from UC villages participating in the chilled finfish fishery in Marovo Lagoon in 1999
caught marginally more fish per fishing trip than their counterparts in SDA villages,
averaging about 26 fish per trip. The proportion of groupers in this catch was similar to that of
fishers from SDA villages (Table 6.6) but, in both communities, this proportion was low
relative to that experienced in the LRFFT (see Table 6.5).
Table 6.6. Total catch and grouper component in the “Eskies” fishery in Marovo Lagoon.
Eskies Catch Fish caught/trip Groupers/trip Percent Grouper
SDA n 12 12
Mean 20.0 3.8 5.3
Median 20.0 2.5
UC n 24 24
Mean 26.5 5.5 4.8
Median 23.0 5.0
CFC Insufficient Data
6.2.5 Frequency of Consumption of LRFFT Species
More than 70 percent of respondents from SDA villages reported that Plectropomus areolatus
featured in their diet and about 20 percent eat that species at least once per week (Figure 6.3).
There was little variation in this pattern according to the presence or absence of spawning
activity. Epinephelus polyphekadion featured in the diet of just over half SDA respondents,
with around 12 percent frequently eating the species. Similar figures apply to E. fuscoguttatus
but less than 10 percent reported eating the species at least once per week, regardless of
110
season. Less than half the SDA respondents reported that the lesser LRFFT target species of
P. leopardus, Variola louti and P. oligacanthus featured in their diet, and less than 10 percent
reported frequent consumption of these species, whether aggregating to spawn or not.
Figure 6.3 illustrates that respondents from UC villages consumed the three main species with
much greater frequency than their SDA neighbours. Three quarters of respondents from UC
villages reported that P. areolatus featured in their diet, and just less than a quarter eat that
species at least once per week. Similar figures apply to E. polyphekadion, but E. fuscoguttatus
features in the diet of well over 80 percent of UC respondents, in or out of spawning season.
Around a third of UC respondents eat this species at least once per week regardless of season.
P. leopardus, V. louti and P. oligacanthus do not feature strongly in the diet of respondents
from UC villages. Regardless of season, less than 10 percent of respondents reported frequent
consumption of these species and less than half reported eating them at all.
The pattern of consumption of P. areolatus by respondents from CFC villages was similar to
that of SDA and UC villages. However, just four per cent eat E. polyphekadion on a frequent
basis during the spawning season compared to nearly 17 percent in the non-spawning season
(Figure 6.3). Although nearly 80 percent indicated that E. fuscoguttatus feature in their diet,
just one quarter of UC respondents eat the species at least once per week in the spawning
season and one third reported eating them frequently outside of this period. More than half of
CFC respondents stated that V. louti features in their diet and 70 percent reported the same for
P. oligacanthus. Frequent consumption of these species, however, was reported by a small
number of respondents.
111
Figure 6.3. Consumption and consumption frequency of LRFFT target species in Marovo
Lagoon.
NB. SDA: n = 128; UC: n = 100; and CFC: n = 24.
Consumption of LRFFT Target Species - Spawning Season
0
20
40
60
80
100
Plectropomus
areolatus
Epinephelus
polyphekadion
Epinephelus
fuscoguttatus
Plectropomus
leopardus
Variola louti Plectropomus
oligacanthus
Pe
rcen
t th
at e
at ta
rge
t sp
ecie
s
0
10
20
30
40
50
Perc
en
t th
at e
at "D
aily-t
o-W
ee
kly
"SDA % that eat target species UC % that eat target species CFC % that eat target speciesSDA % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly" UC % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly" CFC % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly"
Consumption of LRFFT Target Species - Non-Spawning Season
0
20
40
60
80
100
Plectropomus
areolatus
Epinephelus
polyphekadion
Epinephelus
fuscoguttatus
Plectropomus
leopardus
Variola louti Plectropomus
oligacanthus
Pe
rce
nt th
at ea
t ta
rge
t sp
ecie
s
0
10
20
30
40
50
Pe
rcen
t th
at e
at "D
aily-t
o-W
ee
kly
"
SDA % that eat target species UC % that eat target species CFC % that eat target species
SDA % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly" UC % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly" CFC % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly"
112
6.2.6 Income and Expenditure
Income
Figure 6.4 illustrates that the sources of income that attracted the highest rates of participation
from respondents from SDA villages were fishing in the “eskies” fishery, the sale of garden
produce, and the sale of artwork comprised mostly of wood carvings. The highest returns in
the 25-75 percentile were gained by the 23.6 percent of respondents that earned a wage. Wage
earners in this bracket averaged $3,447 in 1999. Table 6.7 indicates that in the upper 25
percent of income earners, wage earners averaged just over $10,000. Two thirds of SDA
respondents earned money from the eskies fishery. Middle-income earners averaged $1,660 in
1999 whilst the upper 25 percent earned an average of $6,088. Two thirds of SDA
respondents earned money from wood carving, compared to 16 and 20 percent of respondents
from UC and CFC villages, respectively. Figure 6.4 indicates that SDA respondents in the
middle-income bracket earned an average of $2,146 from wood carving, while the upper 25
percent of earners gained an average of $8,546. Whilst gardening and farming provided
income for more than 80 percent of SDA villagers, returns from this income source were
modest. Few SDA respondents earned money from diving in the bêche-de-mer or trochus
fisheries, or from the production of copra. More than half participated in the LRFFT and
average earnings for middle-income earners from this fishery were over $1,100 or almost
double that received by their UC neighbours. Remittances were received by a quarter of SDA
respondents to an average value of $866 for middle-income earners.
Around 40 percent of UC respondents participated in the eskies and bêche-de-mer fisheries.
The eskies fishery provided an average of $1,012 for middle-income earners and the upper 25
percent of earners earned an average of $4,458 in 1999 from the fishery (Table 6.6). More
than 80 percent of UC respondents earned money from the sale of garden produce. UC
gardeners were more successful than their SDA and CFC neighbours with a middle-income
average of just less than $1,000 and upper percentile bracket average of $4,705, which is
almost $1,900 more than SDA respondents in this bracket earned in 1999. For the one third of
respondents that earned a wage in 1999, earnings in the mid-range averaged just more than
$5,000, which constituted the most lucrative income source.
113
Figure 6.4. Income (SI$) by source in the 25-75% range for householders in Marovo Lagoon.
NB. SDA: n = 128; UC: n = 100; and CFC: n = 24.
Around a quarter of UC respondents held some business interests in the lagoon and their
earnings were modest in the middle-income range and averaging $7,650 in the upper 25
percentile, indicating that relatively few earned good returns from their ventures. Remittances
in the UC villages were received by about a quarter of the respondents. Returns for the 35
percent that fished in the LRFFT were a modest $595 in the middle-income range whilst the
upper 25 percent of earners averaged $3,455 from this source.
The sample size for CFC responses was too small to make any meaningful conclusions except
for the sale of garden produce, which attracted almost 96 percent participation and earned the
middle-income earner an average of just under $750 in 1999.
Income and Income Sources
0
20
40
60
80
100
Eskies Beche-
de-mer
Trochus Copra Farming Art Wages Business Relative LRFFT
Pe
rce
nt th
at E
arn
ed
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
6,000
Av. In
co
me
- 2
5%
-75
% R
an
ge
SDA % that Earned UC % that Earned CFC % that Earned
SDA Income 25%-75% UC Income 25%-75% CFC Income 25%-75%
114
Table 6.7. Average income by source for respondents from Marovo Lagoon.
Expenditure
The main items of expenditure throughout the lagoon are school fees, Church contributions,
fuel for transport and lighting, food and tobacco. Figure 6.6 illustrates that some disparity
exists between communities adhering to different religious faiths, particularly with regard to
expenditure on school fees and associated costs, food and tobacco. Food was found to be, by
far, the item of greatest expenditure.
More than 80 percent of SDA respondents paid school fees in 1999, at an average in the mid
range of $948. Table 6.8 indicates that the upper 25 percentile paid an average of $3,479 on
this expense during 1999. SDA practitioners made contributions to the Church of $436 on
average in the mid-range, with the upper range contributing an average of $1,434. This is
substantially more than their UC and CFC neighbours. Expenditure by SDA respondents
averaged $1,778 on food in 1999 in the mid-range. Expenditure on tobacco in 1999 showed
an interesting disparity among respondents affiliated with different religious groups. Just 17
percent of SDA respondents spent any money on tobacco in 1999, compared to three quarters
of respondents from UC and CFC villages. Those SDA respondents that did, however, spent
more money on tobacco than their UC and CFC neighbours.
SDA UC CFC Average Income
($ in 1999) 0-25% 25-75% 75-100% 0-25% 25-75% 75-100% 0-25% 25-75% 75-100%
Eskies 233 1,660 6,088 145 1,012 4,458 80 780 5,200
Bêche-de-mer 193 472 5,250 140 567 2,920 200 370 1,250
Trochus 55 248 1,200 25 81 925 10 140 300
Copra 173 520 2,000 70 350 1,000 0 400 1,000
Farming 169 850 2,831 308 955 4,705 70 734 1,965
Art 256 2,146 8,545 165 660 1,987 720 1,200 1,500
Wages 918 3,447 10,023 824 5,026 10,814 2,100 4,236 7,800
Business 404 1,955 11,983 218 923 7,650 0 600 6,000
Relative 225 866 2,400 187 525 1,463 130 450 950
Total 1,136 6,158 15,600 790 4,383 13,657 358 2,522 8,510
LRFFT 215 1,102 5,668 162 595 3,455 37 126 250
115
Three quarters of respondents from UC villages spent money on school fees. However, the
average amount spent in the mid range was just $236, about a quarter of the cost incurred by
SDA respondents in the same category. Table 6.8 indicates that spending in the upper 25
percentile averaged a little less than $2,000 in 1999. Food was by far the greatest expense for
UC respondents who spent an average $1,865 in 1999.
Figure 6.5. Expenditure by item in the 25-75% range for respondents from Marovo Lagoon.
NB. SDA: n = 128; UC: n = 100; and CFC: n = 24.
Little more than half of the respondents from CFC villages indicated that they spent any
money in 1999 on school fees and related expenses. Those that did spent very little money on
those items. There were large differences found between mid-range expenditure and upper 25
percentile expenditure averages for fuel, food and tobacco. Those who spent in the upper 25
percentile clearly had a far superior ability to pay for goods compared to those in the lower
categories of expenditure.
Expenditure and Expenditure Sources
0
20
40
60
80
100
School Church Marriage Fuel Food Clothing Medical Fishing Tobacco LRFFT
Pe
rce
nt th
at S
pe
nt
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
1,600
1,800
2,000
Av. E
xp
en
ditu
re -
25
%-7
5%
Ra
ng
e
SDA % that Spent UC % that Spent CFC % that Spent
SDA Expend. 25%-75% UC Expend. 25%-75% CFC Expend. 25%-75%
116
Table 6.8. Average expenditure by source for respondents from Marovo Lagoon.
6.2.7 Perceptions of Importance
Responses to questions regarding the importance of grouper spawning aggregations revealed a
noncommittal attitude toward the aggregations in terms of resource protection, either for food
or income. Whilst about two thirds of respondents from the SDA and UC villages considered
that spawning aggregations were important to having the resource in the future, by
implication there were approximately one third of respondents who do not support this view
(Figure 6.6). Just 40 percent of SDA respondents considered fishing in spawning aggregations
to feed their family to be important, whereas half considered the aggregations to be an
important source of income. Three quarters of SDA respondents believed it was important not
to fish in passages during the spawning season and nearly 90 percent saw the importance of
the concept of protected areas where there is no fishing allowed.
More than half of UC respondents considered fishing in the deepwater passages during the
spawning season important both to feeding the family (53.7 percent) and to making a living
(57.4 percent), although 68.3 percent believe it is important not to fish in these passages at
this time. Some conflict exists within this community group, however, the majority believe it
is important to not fish the spawning aggregations, and three quarters of respondents support
Expenditure SDA UC CFC
Averages ($) 0-25% 25-75% 75-100% 0-25% 25-75% 75-100% 0-25% 25-75% 75-100%
School 199 948 3,479 29 236 1,986 5 22 150
Church 93 436 1,434 49 184 746 5 30 408
Marriage 42 142 539 70 208 413 100 200 9,000
Fuel 153 535 2,120 154 432 1,385 105 360 1,669
Food 513 1,778 3,721 789 1,865 3,485 170 786 2,478
Clothing 47 202 735 44 190 661 24 74 396
Medical 14 80 284 9 93 1,238 40 250 1,000
Fishing 23 114 1,001 15 59 1,136 20 50 1,200
Tobacco 107 698 2,425 99 541 1,493 27 365 1,944
Total 1,985 4,623 10,041 2,033 3,887 8,039 623 1,772 5,991
LRFFT 14 67 553 9 41 296 5 10 18
117
the concept of protected areas, increasing the likelihood of acceptance of temporal closures on
spawning aggregation sites.
The sample size for CFC responses was too small to be considered representative of the views
of the whole community. However, the views expressed by respondents from this group are
consistent with those from the rest of the lagoon.
Figure 6.6. Respondents from Marovo Lagoon that believed issues surrounding spawning
aggregations were important.
NB. Sample size pertaining to Figure 6.6.
SDA UC CFC
Spawning aggregations to having groupers in the future 20 54 2
Fishing in passages during spawning season to feed the family 20 54 2
Fishing in passages during spawning season to make money 20 54 2
Not fishing in passages during spawning season 77 82 13
Protected areas ie. No fishing 78 83 13
Around three quarters of SDA and UC respondents described customary rights to fishing
areas and respecting these rights as important (Figure 6.7). However, some respondents within
these communities did not regard the system of customary rights as important. This result
reflects some deterioration in the willingness to adhere to customary rules regarding fishing
rights. About 60 percent of SDA and UC respondents recognized the importance of the
0
20
40
60
80
100
Spawning
aggregations to
having groupers
in the future
Fishing in
passages during
spawning season
to feed the family
Fishing in
passages during
spawning season
to make money
Not fishing in
passages during
the spawning
season
Protected areas
ie. no fishing
Responses o
f "I
mport
ant"
(%
)
SDA
UC
CFC
118
moratorium on the LRFFT. Two thirds of SDA respondents said that it was important that the
moratorium be lifted. Less than half (43.37 percent) of UC respondents considered it
important to lift the moratorium, implying that more than half saw it as important to retain the
moratorium. Three quarters of SDA respondents considered adopting modern fisheries
management to be important, whereas two thirds of UC respondents thought it to be
important.
Figure 6.7. Respondents from Marovo Lagoon that believed issues surrounding management
were important.
NB. Sample size pertaining to Figure 6.7
SDA UC CFC
Customary rights regarding fishing areas 77 83 14
Respect for customary rights 77 83 14
The moratorium banning live fish exports 78 83 14
Lifting the moratorium 78 83 13
Adopting modern fisheries management 20 54 2
0
20
40
60
80
100
Customary rights
regarding fishing
areas
Respect for
customary rights
The moratorium
banning live fish
export
Lifting the
moratorium
Adopting modern
fisheries
management
Responses o
f "I
mport
ant"
(%
)
SDA
UC
CFC
119
6.3 Discussion
6.3.1 Perceived Necessity for the LRFFT in Marovo Lagoon
Marovo Lagoon covers a large area and is populated almost entirely of villages that are
inhabited by people living a largely subsistence-agrarian existence, although there is a steadily
increasing reliance on the cash economy. There is a market for the finfish resource, under-
utilised because the Fisheries Centre at Seghe is not used to its full potential. Participation in
the trochus and bêche-de-mer fisheries is minimal and there is little copra production.
Interviews accompanying the pilot survey in October 1999 and informal discussions with
fishers in February 2000 indicated that some villagers were eager for the trade to be resumed
due to a perception that the central fisheries authority was denying them the opportunity to
make a living. Others reasons cited by fishers for resumption of the trade included the need
for money to pay school fees, and because the only other market for finfish, the “eskies”
fishery, provided insufficient income because there was no power for refrigeration. The
Fisheries Centre is a long distance away from many of the villages and most people had
wooden paddle canoes, which limited their ability to transport their catch to the Centre.
Informal discussions during the conduct of the survey indicated that some villagers were
unhappy with the disparity between the price paid to fishers for their live catch and the price
that diners in Hong Kong pay for the fish, which left some feeling disgruntled with the
LRFFT operator. There was concern expressed that the royalty payment, made by the
company to resource owners, was not being equitably distributed through village
infrastructure development. Some saw this type of unsettling influence of the LRFFT on the
social status quo, as an undesirable byproduct accompanying a fishery that provided a
substantial income for just a short period of time. Table 6.7 indicates that while the upper 25
percent of income earners made relatively high returns from the LRFFT, for those in the 25-
75 percentile of income earners, the returns were moderate at best. Figure 6.7 indicates that
opinion was divided as to whether it was important, firstly, to impose the moratorium, and
secondly, to lift the moratorium and resume activity in the fishery.
120
6.3.2 Impact of the LRFFT on Village Households in Marovo Lagoon
The extent of fishing effort exerted during the operation of the LRFFT had a marked effect on
day-to-day village life throughout Marovo Lagoon. Table 6.3 indicates that, during the
operation of the trade, respondents from SDA villages spent an average of more than 32 hours
per week fishing (median of 24 hours) compared to an average of 7.47 hours per week in
1999. Respondents from UC villages averaged more than 37 hours per week fishing during
the trade (median of 36 hours) compared to an average of 9.17 hours week in 1999, while
CFC respondents exerted double the fishing effort than would ordinarily be the case. For
people from SDA and UC villages, in particular, this left little time for the conduct of usual
household duties.
More than half of SDA respondents participated in the LRFFT (Table 6.2). Just 15 percent of
LRFFT participants stated that live fishery bycatch was consumed at remote camps, indicating
that the establishment of such camps was not widespread throughout the SDA community.
The camps, however, comprised whole families with women also fishing. Absence from the
village for long periods of fishing activity through the day, or through the week for those that
established camps, resulted in less time dedicated to village and household activities. Figure
6.2 indicates that there was a substantial reduction in participation in nominated household
activities.
Gardening, an activity that provides an income for 84 percent of Marovo Lagoon respondents
(Figure 6.3), had a substantial reduction in participation among respondents, particularly from
the UC and CFC communities. Less than half those that spent time gardening in 1999,
participated in the activity during the LRFFT (Figure 6.3). The ramifications of this might be
a shortage of fresh produce at local markets during the operation of the trade, an increase in
the cost of such produce during this time as a result, and an increase in the need to purchase
food from outside of the local area. Respondents from SDA villages also reported a decline in
participation in this activity but the extent of the decline was less marked.
The conduct of household repairs throughout Marovo Lagoon virtually ceased during the
LRFFT. Art and craft, particularly but not exclusively, the production of carvings from
coconut, kerosene wood and ebony that so epitomise Marovo Lagoon and the cultural
expression of the people, is practiced throughout the lagoon but the highest concentration of
this activity is among the villages in the SDA community. Other forms of art and craft include
production of fish hooks and lures, and woven fabrics. Figure 6.3 indicates that more than 70
121
percent of male SDA respondents spent an average of nearly 27 hours per week producing art
in 1999. During the LRFFT, this proportion declined to about a third and those that did
continue with art works spent about 10 hours per week less on the activity. The role typically
played by women in the production of the wood carvings involves finishing, an activity
involving fine sanding and polishing. Figure 6.4 indicates that 43 percent of SDA respondents
earned money from their art. Table 6.7 indicates that this income was lucrative by comparison
with other sources. In the 25-75 percentile of income earners, the average income from the
production of art and craft was about double that earned by participants in the LRFFT in the
same percentile range.
There was a decline in the rate of participation of teaching traditional knowledge to children
during the operation of the LRFFT, particularly among household men. Women largely
maintained the extent to which this was practiced. There was even a small increase in
participation among women from the UC villages during the LRFFT.
The dominance of villager’s time and effort during the operation of the LRFFT, concentrated
into the period during which the target species aggregate to spawn, results in an unbalanced
allocation of time to everyday tasks that must be undertaken. Year round operation of the
trade, interrupted only by closure during the lunar phases that coincide with peak spawning
activity during the spawning season, would ease the urgency with which fishers participate in
the trade and allow more time to dedicate to tasks commensurate with the needs of the
household and the village as a whole.
6.3.3 Chilled Fishery in Marovo Lagoon
The fishery that exports fish on ice in eskies to Honiara is a significant, yet underdeveloped
fishery in Marovo Lagoon. Almost two thirds of SDA respondents indicated that they
participated in the fishery. Table 6.4 indicates that this was typically carried out by two
household members who conducted two trips each per week of about six hours in duration,
for around seven months of the year. The lack of electricity for refrigeration and the distance
of most SDA villages from those services available at the Fisheries Centre in Seghe, limit the
extent to which participation is currently possible. Fishing for the eskies fishery was typically
carried out during the period just prior to the anticipated arrival of the boat that backfills with
eskies for the return leg to Honiara. It is most likely that there is a component of the effort and
catch details recorded for the eskies fishery that applies to the household fishery, because
122
some of the catch that is ostensibly for sale would be kept for household consumption. In the
absence of a creel survey, however, these data provide a reasonable guide.
Income derived from this fishery was most significant among SDA respondents. Figure 6.4
indicates that those in the 25-75 percentile of income earners made an average of $1,660 from
the sale of chilled fish in 1999. This figure is about $650 more than was earned that year by
those from UC villages. The upper 25 percent of earners averaged more than $6,000 from the
fishery, making it a very significant source of income in the area. SDA school fees are high
relative to those attended by UC and CFC children (Figure 6.5) and Church fundraising
targets are pursued eagerly by SDA practitioners.
The catch details for the eskies fishery (Table 6.6) indicate that both SDA and UC participants
caught an average of 20-25 fish per trip. The grouper component of the catch was just five
percent, indicating that the fishing activity for the eskies fishery was generally carried out in
the lagoon in habitats that might be frequented during fishing trips for the household where
fishers would likely target species that are preferred in their diet.
A little more than one third of UC respondents indicated that they participated in the eskies
fishery. Fishing effort applied was not dissimilar to that applied by SDA fishers. However,
more than half of the UC participants indicated that they fished in the eskies fisheries for three
months or less in 1999. The UC villages, listed in Table 6.1, are situated in the general
vicinity of the Fisheries Centre at Seghe. Fishers in these villages, in particular, would benefit
from the refrigeration facilities at the centre. Development of the LRFFT in Marovo Lagoon,
with an emphasis on airfreight of live fish to Hong Kong, would involve the use of the
Fisheries Centre at Seghe for holding of live fish and chilled fish for transport to Honiara. The
Rural Fisheries Enterprise Project, which established the centre, is in the process of giving the
centre to the communities who are in a position to use it. The Centre will be capable of
managing the marketing of a diverse range of marine products (Rory Stewart, personal
communication, 2001).
6.3.4 Significance of the LRFFT Target Species in Marovo Lagoon
Groupers, or pajara (both rock cods and coral trouts) do not feature prominently in the diet of
villagers (see Figure 6.2). This result is indicative of the fact that fishers do not necessarily
fish in deepwater passages for subsistence purposes. Proximity to passages plays a key role in
this factor due to the basic nature of transportation. In interviews conducted during the pilot
123
survey in October 1999, villagers reported that mara (trevally spp.) was eaten much more
frequently than pajara.
Figure 6.3 indicates that, while species commonly targeted for the LRFFT did occur in the
diets of respondents in Marovo Lagoon, few respondents reported consuming the species at
least once per week. This was found to be particularly true of respondents from SDA villages,
whose pattern of consumption of these species demonstrated little variation in the presence or
absence of seasonal spawning aggregations. Twenty percent of SDA respondents indicated
that they eat Plectropomos areolatus at least once per week. However, consumption
frequency of other nominated species suggests that the species do not retain great value as a
food resource. This result has implications for the will to conserve the resource for this
purpose.
Exploitation of the resource for financial reward, however, also requires conservation
measures to avert collapse of the resource base. More than 60 percent of SDA respondents
indicated that they believed spawning aggregations were important to having these species in
the future and more than three quarters believed it was important to avoid fishing in
deepwater passages during the spawning season. In addition, more than 88 percent of SDA
respondents indicated that it was important to establish protected areas where no fishing was
permitted (Figure 6.6). This suggests that, although the will to conserve stocks of these
species as a food resource is relatively weak, the basis for acceptance of management
measures that conserve stocks for future trade is strong. In this regard, raising awareness of
the consequences of targeting seasonal spawning aggregations is emphasised so that
management prescriptions initiated by resource owners are fully understood.
Respondents from UC villages indicated that the three main LRFFT species featured in their
diets and that the frequency of consumption was substantially greater than their SDA
neighbours. This was particularly true for the two Epinephelid species, where one quarter of
UC respondents indicated that they ate Epinephelus polyphekadion at least once per week,
and one third reported the same with regard to E. fuscoguttatus. The presence or absence of
seasonal spawning aggregations created very little variation in these results. The frequency
with which respondents consumed the lesser LRFFT species (Plectropomus leopardus,
Variola louti and P. oligacanthus) suggests that these species occur in smaller numbers in
Marovo Lagoon, and that the habitats present do not support large numbers of these species.
This serves to intensify the fishing pressure on the three main species during the operation of
124
the LRFFT and strengthens the argument for a year-round operation of the trade with spatial
and temporal closure of spawning aggregation sites.
The size of the catch, illustrated in Table 4.4, indicates that in Marovo Lagoon the average
number of fish caught per trip was actually higher in 1999 than it was during the LRFFT
despite the average trip duration being three times longer during the LRFFT (Table 4.2). In
informal discussions during the conduct of the questionnaire, a Marovo fisher stated that
fishing effort during the trade in the vicinity of his village was condensed into a small area in
deep water passages (above spawning aggregations) and this crowding affected the level of
success of the individual fisher. The proportion of the catch that comprised groupers in
Marovo Lagoon was about a quarter of the catch in the absence of the LRFFT. Fishers that
participated in the trade reported that nearly 90 percent of the catch per trip comprised
grouper species, indicating that intensive targeting of spawning aggregations was widespread
throughout the lagoon, a fact already accepted by observers.
6.3.5 Income Opportunities and the Cost of Living in Marovo Lagoon
Income in Marovo Lagoon is derived mostly from fishing and agriculture with a relatively
small number of people involved in wage employment and business activities. The rising
costs of living in rural areas stem from transport difficulties, and expenses relating to sending
the large number of children to schools, the need for fuel for transport and lighting, and the
growing predilection for imported packaged foods and tobacco.
Figure 6.4 indicates that the extent of participation in the various income sources varied
among the communities affiliated with different Church groups. Nearly two thirds of SDA
respondents earned money from the eskies fishery compared to 38 percent from UC villages
and just 17 percent from the CFC community. Average income in the middle range from this
source was found to be considerably higher among SDA fishers. Costs associated with
sending children to school were found to be considerably more expensive for SDA
respondents than for those from either UC or CFC villages. Figure 6.5 indicates that school
fees and other school associated costs in the 25-75 percentile range for expenditure averaged
$948 for SDA respondents compared to $236 for those from UC villages.
SDA respondents were also found to be greater contributors to Church fundraising. Average
contributions in the middle range from SDA respondents were more than double that offered
by UC respondents. Hviding (1996 p211) noted that tithe obligations imposed by the SDA
Church require at least 10 percent of any fish catch to be given to the church. This mandatory
125
offering takes the form of either “feeding the pastor” – giving fresh fish directly to Church
employees who rarely fish themselves – or selling the fish and offering the money as special
tithe. SDA respondents also spent more on fuel for transport and lighting. Even tobacco
smoking, engaged in by just 17 percent of SDA respondents compared to 75 percent from UC
and CFC villages, still cost the average SDA smoker considerably more than those aligned
with other Churches. In all, it is apparent that the cost of living is highest for those
respondents aligned with the SDA Church.
Income received by SDA respondents, however, was found to be substantially higher than
those from UC and CFC villages (Table 6.7). The most lucrative source of income in Marovo
Lagoon was from wage employment. One quarter of respondents from SDA villages and one
third of those from UC and CFC villages indicated that they earned a wage in 1999. The
average income derived from this source in the 25-75 percentile was the highest return
generated by any income source, especially for respondents from UC and CFC villages where
the average annual wage was around four times that of the second highest source. Whether
these respondents worked in logging camps or for tourist accommodation facilities, for
example, is unknown. The overwhelming majority of respondents throughout the lagoon earn
money from selling garden produce. The returns, however, are not substantial and it is not
surprising that villagers aim to increase their income by undertaking wage employment to
meet the spiralling cost of living.
Two thirds of SDA respondents earned money from producing art. This mostly comprises
wood carving and is one of the key income sources. Average earnings in the 25-75 percentile
were more than $2,000 and the upper 25 percent of earners from the production of art
averaged more than $8,500 (Table 6.7). Aside from being an enduring element in the culture
of Solomon Islands and an identifiable symbol of Marovo Lagoon, the earnings of wood
carvers constitute a substantial component of annual income and represent a substantial
injection into the local economy. Many of the carvers are also fishers who provide for their
families and earn an income from the eskies fishery. Few respondents dived for bêche-de-mer
or trochus or produced copra. About a quarter received remittances from a relative working
elsewhere, usually in the urban sector and this averaged $866 for the majority of recipients.
There is relatively few income earning opportunities throughout Marovo Lagoon, yet the
integration into the cash economy is well established, particularly as money is needed for the
attendance of children at church schools. Comments made during the conduct of the survey,
from fishers that were opposed to the moratorium, emphasised that participation in the
126
LRFFT enabled them to afford to pay school fees. Others complained that the moratorium
was another restriction on their income earning potential following the ban on the sale of
crocodile. However, as others were not pleased with the price paid to fishers for their live
catch and the extent of post harvest mortality, opinion was divided as to whether, firstly, to
participate in the fishery and, secondly, whether the moratorium should have been imposed
and subsequently lifted, particularly as the lifting of the moratorium was accompanied by
little alteration to the structure of the trade. Conducted on a year round basis with small,
frequent shipments to Honiara for airfreight, the LRFFT would create a regular income stream
for villagers, while developing the eskies fishery further and relieving the pressure on the
reproductive capacity of the grouper resource by closing spawning aggregation sites to fishing
during the spawning season.
6.3.6 The Grouper Resource and its Management in Marovo Lagoon
Responses to questions regarding the importance of the grouper resource and the manner in
which it is managed demonstrated little variation between the three Church communities in
the lagoon. Figure 6.6 indicates that about two thirds of respondents understood that the
occurrence of spawning aggregations was important to having grouper species in the future.
As mentioned earlier, this is something that should feature in LRFFT awareness-raising.
Broadly speaking, about half the respondents from the SDA and UC villages indicated that it
was important to fish in deep water passages in order to feed their family and to make money.
An insufficient sample size for CFC respondents precludes comment. Proximity to passages is
an important issue in Marovo Lagoon, given that subsistence fishing activities are normally
conducted from wooden paddle canoes. Proposed seasonal closures of spawning aggregation
sites in deep water passages would temporarily affect the normal subsistence fishing activities
of about half the respondents from Marovo Lagoon. However, due to the low frequency with
which Marovo people consume the species in question and the fact that closure would entail
about ten days per month for three months of the year, the benefits accrued in terms of stock
retention must be balanced with the inconvenience that might accompany such closure.
Around three quarters of the respondents from the SDA and UC villages recognised the
importance of not fishing in the passages during the spawning season. This implies a
willingness to accept temporary closures of deepwater passages that are known to host
grouper spawning aggregations. Establishment of protected areas where no fishing is
permitted was also widely seen as important. Around 90 percent of SDA and CFC
127
respondents believed protected areas to be important, whereas less than three quarters of UC
respondents held this view.
Figure 6.7 indicates that respondents from CFC villages (n = 13) have a marginally stronger
bond with the traditional customary rights and associated rules that govern them than
respondents from SDA and UC villages. However, a majority of respondents throughout the
lagoon indicated that the customary rights regarding fishing areas, and the respect for such
rights, was important. About 60 percent of respondents believed that the moratorium was
important. However, nearly 70 percent of SDA respondents believe that it is important that
the moratorium be lifted, compared to little more than 40 percent of UC respondents who held
that view. Nearly 80 percent of SDA respondents indicated that adopting modern fisheries
management techniques was important, marginally more than those from UC villagers. This
result augers well for the adoption of a co-management approach, where resource exploitation
decisions are made by the resource owners with input of a more technical nature provided by
the Fisheries Division.
128
Chapter 7: Socio-economics and the Impact of the LRFFT in Roviana
Lagoon
7.1 Introduction
Roviana Lagoon encompasses an area of several hundred square kilometres and extends more
than 50 km southward from Munda to Kalena Bay (Figure 7.1). The lagoon is protected by a
series of offshore raised coral reef islands. Numerous human settlements occur on the barrier
islands. Aswani (1997) stated that the inhabitants comprise various tribal groups, sharing
cultural and linguistic affinities. The largest tribal groups are the Saikile and Kalikoqu chiefly
districts and the smaller Munda area districts surrounding Nusa Roviana. Munda itself is
comprised of several decentralised tribal groups that have traditional political authority over
relatively small land and sea territories. Munda has evolved into a small regional government
and trade centre.
Tenure control in the chiefly districts of Kalikoqu and Saikile is centralised, and territorial
boundaries are clearly defined and uncontested. Constituent systems of governance within
each political enclave have, after several generations of intermarriage, pooled their land and
sea entitlements under the jurisdiction of each respective chief. Entitlement holders are
nucleated in various villages and live adjacent to their collective reefs. The Nusa Roviana and
Munda area, on the other hand, is presently composed of several decentralised tribal groups
that have traditional political authority over relatively smaller land and sea territories. Marine
boundaries project seaward from each village, and marine entitlements are not jurisdictionally
pooled as in Saikile and Kalikoqu, but remain under each village’s control.
Church affiliation is the primary differentiating element for each tribal group in Roviana
Lagoon. Saikile and Kalikoqu adhere mainly to the Christian Fellowship Church. The Church
is a major focus in the cultural, social, political and spiritual life of people throughout the
lagoon. In the Munda and Nusa Roviana area, many smaller churches are in operation but the
United Church predominates. There are also small enclaves of United Church followers in the
Saikile and Kalikoqu chiefly districts.
The local economy is largely subsistence, focusing on fishing and agriculture. The tuna
cannery at Noro provides wage employment for many local inhabitants and there are logging
camps and commercial interests in Munda that also provide entry into the labour market.
129
Figure 7.1. Roviana Lagoon, Western Province (Source: Aswani, 1997).
Table 7.1. Participating Roviana villages.
Munda/Nusa Roviana Kalikoqu Saikile
Village No. Households Village No. Households Village No. Households
Nusa Roviana 18 Sasavele 15 Nusa Hope 20
Mbulelavata 10 Nusa Banga 20 Olive 15
Barahulu 15 Hapai 10
Araroso 5
TOTAL 28 TOTAL 50 TOTAL 50
130
7.2 Results
7.2.1 Sample Description
People affiliated with the Saikile and Kalikoqu chiefly districts comprised more than 78
percent of respondents and those from the Munda/Nusa Roviana district comprised 22
percent. Table 7.1 summarises the participating villages. Little separates the data from
householders from the different districts within the lagoon. Significantly, householders from
Roviana Lagoon earned more in 1999 than their counterparts in other regions that hosted the
LRFFT, and the difference between average income and average expenditure is greater,
indicating greater financial security. Table 7.2 indicates that more than half of Kalikoqu
respondents and around three quarters of those from Saikile fished in the LRFFT.
Significantly, there was no participation in the LRFFT by respondents from the Munda/Nusa
Roviana district. A high proportion of live fish were bought by the LRFFT operator, and most
of the remaining bycatch was taken back to villages for consumption. Around 20 percent of
the bycatch was consumed in camps set up specifically for maximising fishing effort in the
trade. Kalikoqu respondents were able to sell some of their bycatch in a local market.
Villagers throughout the lagoon are seeking a significant increase in the price paid by the
operator, both to the fisher and in village royalty. Prices paid were a major issue prior to the
moratorium and fishers now seek substantial remuneration for live fish.
Table 7.2. Characteristics of the sample in Roviana Lagoon.
Roviana Lagoon Munda/Nusa Roviana Kalikoqu Saikile
% Households Surveyed ~25 25 25
No. Respondents 28 (21.9% of RL tot) 50 (39.1% of RL tot) 50 (39.1% of RL tot)
Av. Size of Household 7.4 7.3 7.4
Av. Age of Respondent 39.1 38.3 38.9
Fished in the LRFFT 0 28 (56% of Kalikoqu) 37 (74% of Saikile)
Mean Income & Expend: 1999 Income Expend. Income Expend. Income Expend.
0% to 25% range ($) 3,836 2,005 4,434 1,953 4,516 2,167
25% to 75% range ($) 8,859 4,559 10,136 4,725 9,276 4,361
75% to 100% range ($) 20,521 9,408 22,872 8,343 20,639 10,005
Mean Income & Expend: LRFFT Income Expend. Income Expend. Income Expend.
0% to 25% range ($) 0 0 214 23 234 50
25% to 75% range ($) 0 0 1,441 90 871 72
75% to 100% range ($) 0 0 4,447 350 2,850 128
Extent of LRFFT Bycatch Mean Mean Mean
131
% of the catch that Co. bought n/a 67.9 73.2
Bycatch Use (%) Mean Mean Mean
Taken to the village n/a 62.9 63.2
Eaten at fishers camp n/a 16.4 23.0
Sold at a market n/a 13.2 6.5
Fed to captive live fish n/a 2.1 1.4
Discarded n/a 2.1 1.1
Released n/a 0.0 4.9
Price Responsiveness Median Median Median
Co. should pay the fisher ($/kg) n/a 22.00 20.00
Co. should pay the village ($/kg) n/a 19.00 18.00
7.2.2 Activities of the Household
Throughout Roviana Lagoon, participation in everyday household activities was greatly
reduced during the operation of the LRFFT. The number of hours per week dedicated to the
tasks by those that did perform them was also significantly reduced. Figure 7.2 illustrates that
most men from the Saikile villages continued to actively work in the garden during the
operation of the LRFFT but the time dedicated to the task declined sharply. Gardening
activity from Kalikoqu men declined by 40 percent during the LRFFT. Gardening by women
in Saikile villages declined by 40 percent during the LRFFT. More than half of the Saikile
men spent an average of nearly 15 hours per week repairing and maintaining the house.
During the LRFFT, however, 20 percent spent an average of just one and a half hours per
week on this task. Production of copra all but ceased during the LRFFT, freeing an average of
around 24 hours per week throughout the lagoon. Teaching children and attending Church
declined significantly during the LRFFT, particularly among the women. Those that did
attend to these tasks dedicated the same amount of time during the LRFFT as in 1999.
132
Figure 7.2. Participation in household activities in the presence and absence of the LRFFT.
NB. Sample size pertaining to Figure 7.4.
n Men Women
1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT
Munda/Nusa Roviana 28 0 28 0
Kalikoqu 50 28 50 28
Saikile 50 37 50 37
Munda/Nusa Roviana - Men
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
Pa
rtic
ipa
tio
n (
%)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
Kalikoqu - Men
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
Pa
rtic
ipa
tio
n (
%)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
Kalikoqu - Women
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Ho
urs
pe
r W
ee
k
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
Munda/Nusa Roviana - Women
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Ho
urs
pe
r W
ee
k
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
Saikile - Men
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
Pa
rtic
ipa
tio
n (
%)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
Saikile - Women
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Ho
urs
pe
r W
ee
k
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
133
7.2.3 Fishing Effort
Table 7.3 indicates that respondents from the Kalikoqu villages exerted slightly more
individual fishing effort during the LRFFT than respondents from the Saikile villages. Fishing
effort in the household fishery varied little throughout the lagoon, with respondents generally
making three or more trips per week for an average duration of about two hours. There was a
dramatic increase, throughout the Kalikoqu and Saikile chiefly districts, in weekly fishing
activity during the operation of the LRFFT compare to fishing effort in 1999. Kalikoqu
respondents reported average weekly fishing effort during the LRFFT of 30.3 hours.
Respondents from Saikile villages recorded an average of 28.4 hours during the LRFFT.
Table 7.3. Comparison of fishing effort in 1999 and during the LRFFT in Roviana Lagoon.
Roviana Lagoon No. householders No. trips/wk No. hrs/trip No. hrs/wk
1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT
n 28 0 28 0 28 0 28 0
Mean 2.7 3.6 2.7 9.5
Munda/Nusa
Roviana
Median 2.0 3.5 2.0 8.5
Kalikoqu n 50 28 49 28 50 28 49 28
Mean 2.6 2.1 3.7 4.7 2.3 6.4 8.3 30.3
Median 2.0 2.0 3.0 5.5 2.0 6.0 8.0 25.0
Saikile n 50 37 50 37 50 37 50 37
Mean 2.8 1.6 3.5 4.4 2.5 6.3 9.4 28.4
Median 3.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 2.0 6.0 7.0 25.0
The “eskies” fishery does not play a major role in the lives of the survey respondents from
Roviana Lagoon. Table 7.4 indicates that participation in the fishery dwindled with increased
distance from Munda. Whilst the fishery produced relatively high returns for some (see
Section 7.2.6), the level of participation was found to be minimal. Those that did participate
did so for around half the year and dedicated about one full day per week to it. Respondents
from Saikile villages reported significantly longer trip duration than respondents from
elsewhere in the lagoon.
Table 7.4. Fishing effort in the “Eskies” fishery from Roviana Lagoon to Honiara.
Eskies fishery - 1999 Participation No. months H/holders Trips/wk Hrs/trip Hrs/wk
n 21.4% 5 6 5 6 4
Mean 6.0 2.0 1.2 5.3 9.5
Munda/Nusa
Roviana
Median 3.0 1.0 1.0 7.0 9.0
134
Kalikoqu n 16.0% 8 7 6 8 6
Mean 8.5 2.0 1.0 4.8 6.3
Median 10.5 2.0 1.0 5.5 7.0
Saikile n 12.0% 6 6 6 6 6
Mean 6.3 2.0 1.0 9.7 9.7
Median 4.5 1.0 1.0 10.5 10.5
7.2.4 Fishing Catch
Respondents from the Kalikoqu and Saikile chiefly districts reported very similar catch rates
whilst fishing both for the household and for the LRFFT. The proportion of the household
catch that comprised grouper species was about a quarter of the total catch for all Roviana
respondents. Considering the significant increase in trip duration during the LRFFT (see
Table 7.3), the extent of the catch displayed minimal variation. The average number of fish
caught by Kalikoqu and Saikile respondents during the operation of the trade remained
remarkably static in the light of such a significant increase in fishing effort during this time.
The proportion of the catch that comprised groupers increased to about three quarters of the
total catch during the LRFFT.
Table 7.5. Comparison of total catch, and the component of which were groupers, between
fishing activity in 1999 and during the LRFFT in Roviana Lagoon.
Roviana Lagoon Total no. fish caught per
trip
No. groupers caught per
trip
Grouper proportion of
catch
1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT
n 28 0 28 0 Munda/Nusa
Roviana Mean 10.8 2.5 22.9%
Median 9.5 2.5
Kalikoqu n 49 28 49 28
Mean 10.4 11.4 2.0 9.1 19.3% 80.2%
Median 8.0 12.0 2.0 9.5
Saikile n 50 37 50 37
Mean 12.5 12.3 3.6 9.0 29.1% 73.0%
Median 10.0 12.0 3.0 8.0
Due to the level of participation in the eskies fishery in Roviana Lagoon, the sample size is
quite small but from the available data it can be seen (in Table 7.6) that the one full day that
participating respondents dedicated to the fishery per week resulted in an average total catch
ranging from 10.4 fish per trip for Kalikoqu participants to 27.8 fish per trip for Saikile
135
participants. This is a reflection of the additional time spent fishing per trip for this fishery
(Table 7.4). The average proportion of groupers in this catch was minimal at about 15 percent.
Table 7.6. Total catch and grouper component in the “Eskies” fishery in Roviana Lagoon.
Eskies Catch Fish caught/trip Groupers/trip Percent grouper
Munda/Nusa Roviana n 6 6
Mean 14.3 2.5 17.4%
Median 16.5 3.0
Kalikoqu n 8 8
Mean 10.4 1.8 16.9%
Median 12.0 1.5
Saikile n 6 6
Mean 26.8 3.3 12.4%
Median 27.0 3.5
7.2.5 Frequency of Consumption of LRFFT Species
The outstanding feature of the results pertaining to consumption of LRFFT target species in
Roviana Lagoon is that although it is known that mara (trevallies) are the preferred food fish
(Hamilton and Walter, 1999), the nominated grouper species do form an integral part of the
diet of villagers. The three main LRFFT species feature prominently, especially during the
known spawning season. Figure 7.3 illustrates the pattern of consumption of LRFFT target
species by villagers from the three districts within the lagoon.
Figure 7.3 indicates that more than 95 percent of Roviana respondents from throughout the
lagoon reported that Plectropomus areolatus, Epinephelus polyphekadion and E.
fuscoguttatus featured in their diet throughout the year, regardless of the occurrence of
seasonal spawning activity. Consumption frequency of P. areolatus outside of the known
spawning season increased with distance from Munda. During the spawning season, 88
percent of Kalikoqu respondents and 68 percent of Saikile respondents reported eating this
species at least once per week. More than half of the respondents from the Munda/Nusa
Roviana area stated that they eat P. areolatus at least once per week.
136
Figure 7.3. Consumption and consumption frequency of LRFFT target species in Roviana
Lagoon.
NB. Munda/Nusa Roviana: n = 28; Kalikoqu: n = 50; and Saikile: n = 50.
Consumption of LRFFT Target Species - Spawning Season
0
20
40
60
80
100
Plectropomus
areolatus
Epinephelus
polyphekadion
Epinephelus
fuscoguttatus
Plectropomus
leopardus
Variola louti Plectropomus
oligacanthus
Pe
rce
nt th
at e
at ta
rge
t sp
ecie
s
0
20
40
60
80
100
Pe
rce
nt th
at e
at "D
aily-t
o-W
ee
kly
"
Munda % that eat target species Kalikoqu % that eat target species Saikile % that eat target species
Munda % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly" Kalikoqu % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly" Saikile % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly"
Consumption of LRFFT Target Species - Non-Spawning Season
0
20
40
60
80
100
Plectropomus
areolatus
Epinephelus
polyphekadion
Epinephelus
fuscoguttatus
Plectropomus
leopardus
Variola louti Plectropomus
oligacanthus
Pe
rce
nt th
at e
at ta
rge
t sp
ecie
s
0
20
40
60
80
100
Pe
rce
nt th
at e
at "D
aily-t
o-W
ee
kly
"
Munda % that eat target species Kalikoqu % that eat target species Saikile % that eat target species
Munda % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly" Kalikoqu % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly" Saikile % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly"
137
Forty percent of Saikile respondents frequently ate E. polyphekadion outside of the spawning
season. During the spawning period, nearly 60 percent of Saikile respondents frequently ate
this species while 70 percent of Kalikoqu respondents and more than 40 percent of
Munda/Nusa Roviana respondents did so. More than half of Saikile respondents consumed E.
fuscoguttatus at least once per week outside of the spawning season. This frequency increased
to 80 percent during the spawning season. The most dramatic increases in the consumption
frequency of the three main LRFFT target species was reported by respondents from Kalikoqu
villages. Munda/Nusa Roviana respondents also reported dramatic increases in consumption
frequency during the spawning period of species targeted for the LRFFT.
Consumption of species that do not feature in as great abundance in live fish exports from
Solomon Islands (P. leopardus, Variola louti and P. oligacanthus) did not feature
prominently in the diet of Roviana respondents. Around 70 to 80 percent of respondents
reported that P. leopardus feature in their diet throughout the year but just a small proportion
ate them frequently outside of the spawning season, with a marginal increase in this frequency
during the season of spawning activity. The coronation trout (V. louti) featured in the diet of
about a quarter of respondents anywhere in the lagoon and at any time of the year. There were
no responses of “Daily-to-Weekly” consumption of this species outside of the spawning
season and minimal frequent consumption during the spawning season. Consumption of P.
oligacanthus by all respondents varied little throughout the year. The inclusion of this species
in villager’s diets appears to decrease with distance from Munda.
138
7.2.6 Income and Expenditure
Income
Figure 7.4. Income by source (SI$) in the 25-75% range for householders in Roviana Lagoon.
NB. Munda/Nusa Roviana: n = 28; Kalikoqu: n = 50; and Saikile: n = 50.
Figure 7.4 indicates that the source of income in Roviana Lagoon that created the highest
return in 1999 was wage employment. Around 40 percent of respondents earned money from
wages with the average in the 25-75 percentile decreasing with distance from Munda. The
upper 25 percent of wage earners averaged more than $20,000 in the Munda/Nusa Roviana
area, and less than $10,000 for respondents from the Kalikoqu and Saikile chiefly districts
(see Table 7.7). The major source of income was from the sale of garden produce. Almost all
respondents reported earning money in this way. The most successful farmers were found to
be respondents from Kalikoqu villages who averaged nearly $4,000 in the middle range and
more than $8,500 in the upper 25 percent of earners. Diving for bêche-de-mer, producing
copra and receiving remittances from relatives working elsewhere were also important
sources of income, albeit that the return from these sources was not as high as that of wage
earners and those with business interests in the lagoon. More than three quarters of Saikile
respondents and more than half of respondents from Kalikoqu villages fished in the LRFFT.
Income from participation in the fishery was higher for respondents from Kalikoqu villages
Income and Income Sources
0
20
40
60
80
100
Eskies Bêche-
de-mer
Trochus Copra Farming Art Wages Business Relative LRFFT
Pe
rce
nt th
at E
arn
ed
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
6,000
7,000
8,000
Av. In
co
me -
25
%-7
5%
Ran
ge
Munda/Nusa Roviana % that Earned Kalikoqu % that Earned Saikile % that Earned
Munda/Nusa Roviana Income 25%-75% Kalikoqu Income 25%-75% Saikile Income 25%-75%
139
but represented returns comparable to those that participated in the eskies fishery. Considering
the extent of participation from respondents from Saikile villages, returns for most fishers
were not significant. Even those that earned in the upper 25 percent averaged just half that
earned in that range by respondents from Kalikoqu villages. Table 7.7 indicates the disparity
between low and high income earners by source in Roviana Lagoon. Householders in Roviana
Lagoon have a range of income earning options.
Table 7.7. Average income by source for respondents from Roviana Lagoon.
Income Munda/Nusa Roviana Kalikoqu Saikile
Averages ($) 0-25% 25-75% 75-
100% 0-25% 25-75%
75-
100% 0-25% 25-75%
75-
100%
Eskies 90 1,620 3,900 400 1,530 4,050 514 2,640 5,280
Bêche-de-mer 410 943 2,000 190 742 4,650 217 760 2,000
Trochus 147 520 1,750 44 185 567 57 208 665
Copra 323 941 3,733 225 833 2,333 444 975 4,000
Farming 620 2,662 5,616 1,193 3,979 8,515 854 2,568 5,669
Art 1,200 1,500 2,600 450 835 5,250 50 510 4,000
Wages 2,060 7,150 20,800 2,268 6,793 9,620 2,190 5,100 9,767
Business 1,107 3,000 6,000 483 3,738 6,000 850 3,500 9,000
Relative 300 769 1,750 211 680 2,700 150 363 864
Total 3,969 8,859 20,521 4,434 10,043 22,872 4,568 9,171 20,639
LRFFT 0 0 0 253 1,257 5,470 282 994 2,622
Expenditure
Consistent with the other regions that hosted the LRFFT, the major items of expenditure in
Roviana Lagoon were food, school related costs, fuel for transport and lighting, and tobacco.
Little separated the amount that was incurred by householders throughout the lagoon in the
25-75 percentile range, with the exception of the purchase of food (Figure 7.5). Munda/Nusa
Roviana respondents in this range paid about $300 on average more than their neighbours
from the Kalikoqu and Saikile chiefly districts (see Table 7.8). A very high percentage of
respondents spent money on tobacco throughout the lagoon, with around 80 percent incurring
costs associated with smoking. The average cost in the 25-75 percentile was comparable to
that which was spent on schooling in the same range. Respondents from the Munda/Nusa
Roviana area spent more on fuel than respondents from other districts within Roviana
Lagoon.
140
Figure 7.5. Expenditure by item in the 25-75% range for respondents from Roviana Lagoon.
NB. Munda/Nusa Roviana: n = 28; Kalikoqu: n = 50; and Saikile: n = 50.
Table 7.8. Average expenditure by source for respondents from Roviana Lagoon.
Expenditure Munda/Nusa Roviana Kalikoqu Saikile
0-25% 25-75% 75-
100% 0-25% 25-75%
75-
100% 0-25% 25-75%
75-
100%
School 85 622 1,958 115 619 2,312 90 550 1,900
Church 54 105 404 35 110 374 26 77 178
Marriage 59 160 333 75 196 443 43 169 839
Fuel 199 806 1,610 221 598 1,230 222 642 1,904
Food 797 1,819 3,497 637 2,124 3,332 769 2,167 4,222
Clothing 86 349 350 66 277 545 53 221 651
Medical 7 65 550 13 81 406 8 59 428
Fishing 17 42 120 30 88 227 24 58 134
Tobacco 134 697 1,947 149 633 1,521 141 635 1,680
TOTAL 2,005 4,559 9,408 1,953 4,725 8,343 2,167 4,361 10,005
LRFFT 0 0 0 25 96 260 50 77 128
Expenditure and Expenditure Sources
0
20
40
60
80
100
School Church Marriage Fuel Food Clothing Medical Fishing Tobacco LRFFT
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
Munda/Nusa Roviana % that Spent Kalikoqu % that Spent Saikile % that Spent
Munda/Nusa Roviana Expend. 25%-75% Kalikoqu Expend. 25%-75% Saikile Expend. 25%-75%
141
7.2.7 Perceptions of Importance
Responses to questions measuring perceptions of importance regarding issues affecting the
management of the LRFFT in Roviana Lagoon were consistent with those received
throughout the study. Figure 7.6 illustrates that around 90 percent of respondents believe that
spawning aggregations are important to having the fish resource in the future. More than half
believe that the spawning aggregations are an important source of food for their families,
including 62 percent of respondents from Saikile villages. Only 18 percent of respondents
from Kalikoqu villages saw the aggregations as important sources of income compared to 38
percent of those surveyed from Saikile villages. Less than 30 percent of Munda/Nusa Roviana
respondents held that view. The overwhelming majority of respondents believe that it is
important not to fish in seasonal grouper spawning aggregations and that the concept of
protected areas forbidding fishing is equally important.
Figure 7.6. Respondents from Roviana Lagoon that believed issues surrounding grouper
spawning aggregations were important.
NB. Munda/Nusa Roviana: n = 28; Kalikoqu: n = 50; and Saikile: n = 50.
Just 60 percent of respondents from Saikile villages and 76 percent from Kalikoqu villages
described customary rights to fishing areas and respecting these rights as important (Figure
7.7). This suggests that there is a significant element within the lagoon that does not regard
the system of customary rights as important and is a reflection of some deterioration in the
willingness to adhere to customary rules regarding fishing rights. Respondents from
Munda/Nusa Roviana and Saikile, in particular, recognized the importance of the moratorium.
0
20
40
60
80
100
Spawning
aggregations to
having groupers
in the future
Fishing in
passages during
spawning season
to feed the family
Fishing in
passages during
spawning season
to make money
Not fishing in
passages during
the spawning
season
Protected areas
ie. no fishing
Responses o
f "I
mport
ant"
(%
)
Munda/Nusa Roviana
Kalikoqu
Saikile
142
Opinions regarding the importance of lifting the moratorium declined with distance from
Munda. Significantly, the majority of respondents did not see lifting the moratorium as
important. About two thirds of Roviana respondents considered adopting modern fisheries
management to be important. Three quarters of respondents from Kalikoqu villages believe it
is important to incorporate modern fisheries management.
Figure 7.7. Respondents from Roviana Lagoon that believed issues surrounding management
were important.
NB. Munda/Nusa Roviana: n = 28; Kalikoqu: n = 50; and Saikile: n = 50.
7.3 Discussion
7.3.1 Perceived Necessity for the LRFFT in Roviana Lagoon
Roviana Lagoon covers a much smaller area than Marovo Lagoon but the lagoon is also
inhabited by people living a largely agrarian existence. The difference in Roviana is that the
townships of Munda with its markets, and Noro with its tuna cannery, are nearby and there is
a steadily increasing reliance on the cash economy, often accompanying entry into the labour
market. As in Marovo Lagoon, there is a market for the finfish resource in the “eskies” fishery
but participation in the fishery is minimal, particularly for those living further away from
Munda. The Fisheries Centre in Munda and some nearby resorts buy fish from local fishers.
More than 40 percent of respondents participated in the bêche-de-mer fishery, slightly less
dived for trochus and about half produced copra. Fishers in the Saikile village of Hapai, far
0
20
40
60
80
100
Customary rights
regarding fishing
areas
Respect for
customary rights
The moratorium
banning live fish
export
Lifting the
moratorium
Adopting modern
fisheries
management
Responses o
f "I
mport
ant"
(%
)
Munda/Nusa Roviana Kalikoqu Saikile
143
from the markets of Munda and the cannery at Noro, told Johannes (1999) that due to the
level of post-harvest mortality, the price received for live fish caused resentment among some
villagers and there was not much enthusiasm for the return of the LRFFT company even if the
moratorium was lifted. Nonetheless, 74 percent of respondents from Saikile villages
participated in the fishery (Table 7.2). Figure 7.7 indicates that 72 percent of Saikile
respondents stated that the moratorium was important and just 24 percent indicated that it was
important to lift the moratorium. Given that monetary losses resulting from post harvest
mortality was a significant issue in Roviana Lagoon, the reinstatement of the live fishery with
an emphasis on airfreight, in conjunction with further development of the eskies fishery, as
outlined in the Marovo Lagoon section of this paper, should induce a positive response from
fishers and resource owners.
7.3.2 Impact of the LRFFT on Village Households in Roviana Lagoon
The extent of fishing effort exerted during the operation of the LRFFT had a significant effect
on day-to-day village life throughout the Kalikoqu and Saikile chiefly districts of Roviana
Lagoon. Table 7.3 indicates that, during the operation of the trade, respondents from Kalikoqu
villages exerted an average of more than 30 hours per week fishing (median of 25 hours)
compared to an average of little more than eight hours per week in 1999. Respondents from
Saikile villages averaged more than 28 hours per week fishing during the trade (median of 25
hours) compared to an average of more than nine hours week in 1999, while Munda/Nusa
Roviana respondents did not participate in the LRFFT. For people from Kalikoqu and Saikile
villages, this left little time for the conduct of usual household duties.
More than half of respondents from Kalikoqu villages participated in the LRFFT (Table 7.2).
Just 16 percent of LRFFT participants stated that live fishery bycatch was consumed at
remote camps, indicating that the establishment of such camps was not widespread throughout
the Kalikoqu community. Absence from the village for long periods of fishing activity
through the day, or through the week for those that established camps, resulted in less time
dedicated to village and household activities. Figure 7.2 indicates that there was a substantial
reduction in participation in nominated household activities. Around 23 percent of
respondents from Saikile villages consumed LRFFT bycatch at remote camps and very few
were able to sell bycatch in a local market. This is indicative of the distance from Munda and
its markets and the proximity of Saikile villages to the deepwater passages that typically host
spawning aggregations.
144
Gardening, an activity that provides an income for 95 percent of Roviana Lagoon respondents
(Figure 4.3), saw a significant reduction in participation among respondents from the
Kalikoqu and Saikile communities. No comparison was possible for the respondents from the
Munda/Nusa Roviana area, as no respondents from this area had fished in the LRFFT. The
ramifications of the reduction in gardening activity during the LRFFT might be a shortage of
fresh produce at local markets during the operation of the trade, an increase in the cost of such
produce during this time as a result, and an increase in the need to purchase food from outside
the local area. Figure 7.4 indicates that the sale of gardening and farming produce represents a
significant component of the income for respondents from Kalikoqu villages. Participation in
the LRFFT represents an opportunity cost for these respondents, particularly as income
derived from participation in the trade was not great for the majority of participants (those in
the 25-75 percentile). There was also a decline in the rate of participation of teaching
traditional knowledge to children during the operation of the LRFFT, particularly among
household men. Women largely maintained the extent to which this was practiced.
The dominance of villager’s time and effort spent fishing during the operation of the LRFFT,
concentrated into the period during which the target species aggregate to spawn, results in an
unbalanced allocation of time to everyday tasks that must be undertaken. Participation, and
the extent to which fishers participated in the LRFFT, increased with distance from Munda.
The disruption to village and household life in general also increased with distance from
Munda. Year round operation of the trade, interrupted only by closure during the lunar phases
that coincide with peak spawning activity during the spawning season would ease the urgency
with which fishers participate in the trade and allow more time to dedicate to tasks
commensurate with the needs of the household and the village as a whole.
7.3.3 Chilled Fishery in Roviana Lagoon
The fishery that exports fish on ice in eskies to Honiara is not a significant fishery in Roviana
Lagoon. It is a fishery that could be developed further, in conjunction with year-round
operation of the LRFFT. Little more than 20 percent of respondents from the Munda/Nusa
Roviana area indicated that they participated in the fishery. The proportion of participants in
the eskies fishery declined with distance from Honiara, with just 12 percent of respondents
from Saikile villages indicating that they fished in the eskies fishery. Table 7.4 indicates that
participation typically entailed the dedication of one full day per week, for around half of the
year. The lack of electricity for refrigeration and the distance from such services available at
the Fisheries Centre in Munda from most villages, particularly those from Kalikoqu and
145
Saikile chiefly districts, limit the extent to which participation is currently possible. Regular
shipping of live fish to a transhipment facility in Honiara might develop this fishery further,
thereby creating a market for LRFFT bycatch and bolstering the income stream for villagers
throughout the lagoon.
Income derived from the eskies fishery was most significant among respondents from Saikile
villages. Figure 7.4 indicates that those in the 25-75 percentile of income earners made an
average of $2,640 from the sale of chilled fish in 1999. This figure is about $1,000 more than
was earned that year by eskies fishery participants in the other areas of the lagoon. The upper
25 percent of earners averaged more than $5,200 from the fishery, making it a very significant
source of income in the area.
The catch details for the eskies fishery (Table 7.6) indicate that participants from Saikile
villages caught an average of 27 fish per trip. The grouper component of the catch was about
one out of every eight fish caught. The eskies catch was significantly greater for Saikile
villages. Respondents from these villages exerted more effort in the fishery but the extent of
the catch was disproportionate to this excess effort. The willingness of respondents from these
villages to exert such effort indicates that fishers from the villages in the Saikile district stand
to benefit from further development of the eskies fishery in conjunction with year-round
operation of the LRFFT with seasonal closures of spawning aggregation sites.
7.3.4 Significance of the LRFFT Target Species in Roviana Lagoon
Groupers, or pazara (both rock cods and coral trouts) (Hamilton and Walter, 1999), do not
feature prominently in the diet of villagers (see Figure 4.2). This result is indicative of the fact
that fishers do not necessarily fish in deepwater passages for subsistence purposes. Proximity
to passages plays a key role in this due to the basic nature of transportation for most villagers,
particularly for those in more remote areas of the lagoon. Hamilton and Walter (1999)
reported that mara (a generic term covering a range of trevally spp.) form a significant
component of Roviana villager’s diet. Their study of Roviana fisher’s intimate knowledge of
mara behaviour based in the Kalikoqu district, revealed fishers target aggregations of mara
moving through a deep water passage in pursuit of baitfish that move in and out of the lagoon
on the tide. Whilst these species are important food fish in Roviana Lagoon, fishing activity in
deep water passages will likely encounter species of pazara.
Figure 7.3 indicates that pazara species, those commonly targeted for the LRFFT, also
featured prominently in the diets of respondents in Roviana Lagoon. Outside of the spawning
146
season, responses noting frequent consumption of the three main species increased with
distance from Munda. During the spawning season, the overwhelming majority of
respondents reported eating the three main species at least once per week. This was found to
be particularly true of respondents from Kalikoqu villages, whose pattern of consumption of
these species demonstrated substantial increases in consumption during seasonal spawning
aggregations.
Just fewer than 90 percent of Kalikoqu respondents indicated that they eat Plectropomos
areolatus at least once per week during the spawning season. Consumption rates for
Epinephelus polyphekadion and E. fuscoguttatus were less frequent but form a significant
component of the diet of respondents. Consumption of the species of lesser importance to the
LRFFT in Solomon Islands was found to be much less significant. Few respondents
consumed Variola louti, for example, on a frequent basis, regardless of spawning activity.
This result has implications for the will to conserve the resource for this purpose, particularly
the three main target species that aggregate to spawn in overlapping variables of time and
space. Given the range of income earning opportunities in Roviana Lagoon and the
significance of the resource in the subsistence fishery, it is not surprising that fishers were
reticent to continue fishing in the LRFFT for the price that they were offered by the operator
(see Johannes, 1999).
Around 90 percent of Roviana Lagoon respondents indicated that they believed spawning
aggregations were important to having these species in the future and a similar proportion
believed it was important to avoid fishing in deepwater passages during the spawning season.
In addition, around 90 percent of all respondents indicated that it was important to establish
protected areas where no fishing was permitted (Figure 7.6). This suggests that the basis for
acceptance of management measures that conserve stocks for food and for future trade is
strong.
The size of the catch, illustrated in Table 7.5, indicates that in Roviana Lagoon the average
number of fish caught per trip was only marginally higher during the LRFFT than it was in
1999, despite the average trip duration being more than three times longer during the LRFFT
(Table 7.3). Fishers that participated in the trade reported that around three quarters of the
catch per trip comprised grouper species, suggesting that the intensive targeting of spawning
aggregations could be depleting the aggregations of spawning fish at an alarming rate. These
results suggest that a management initiative for the LRFFT that endorses year-round live
147
fishing activity with seasonal closure of spawning aggregation sites would conserve stocks of
pazara both as a component of villager’s diets and as a source of income in the future.
7.3.5 Income Opportunities and the Cost of Living in Roviana Lagoon
Income in Roviana Lagoon is characterised by the diversity of choice available to many
within the lagoon. Like Marovo, most income is derived from fishing and agriculture. An
increasing number of people are involved in wage employment and business activities.
Recipients of income from wage employment, in particular, earned significantly larger sums
than were obtained from other sources. Average income from wage employment in the 25-75
percentile was similar throughout the lagoon. The average amount earned from this source
did, however, decrease with distance from Munda. In the upper 25 percent of wage earners,
however, Munda/Nusa Roviana respondents averaged more than double that of respondents
from the Kalikoqu and Saikile chiefly districts. The township of Munda has numerous stores
that stock many imported foodstuffs, tobacco and other items. Figure 7.5 indicates that around
80 percent of respondents throughout the lagoon purchased tobacco in 1999 and that most
respondents - those in the 25-75 percentile - spent an average of around $650, which is
comparable to that which was spent on school fees and related expenditure.
Participation in the eskies fishery was minimal, but those that did participate, earned more in
the middle range than was earned from the production of copra, which required much greater
expenditure of time. For the 12 percent of respondents from Saikile villages that earned an
income from the eskies fishery, the returns in the 25-75 percentile were very similar to that
which was earned from gardening and farming. Development of this fishery in conjunction
with the LRFFT could add value to the LRFFT in Roviana Lagoon.
The overwhelming majority of respondents earned an income from gardening and farming.
All respondents from Kalikoqu villages earned a living in this way and the average earnings
of these respondents were significantly greater at all levels than their neighbours from the
other districts (Table 7.7). During the LRFFT, participation in gardening and farming for
respondents from Kalikoqu villages that fished in the trade declined to less than 60 percent.
Those that continued to garden during the LRFFT dedicated less time to it (Figure 7.2). Year-
round operation of the trade with seasonal closures of spawning aggregation sites, with small,
frequent shipments to Honiara for airfreight would allow villagers time to maintain normality
in village and household life. This would allow villagers to maintain the income stream from
148
the variety of sources currently utilised while also increasing the earnings from exploiting the
finfish resource on a more sustainable basis.
7.3.6 The Grouper Resource and its Management in Roviana Lagoon
Responses to questions regarding the importance of the grouper resource and the manner in
which it is managed demonstrated little variation between the three divisions of the lagoon.
Figure 7.6 indicates that the overwhelming majority of respondents understood that the
occurrence of spawning aggregations was important to having grouper species in the future.
This is indicative that the grouper species do figure prominently in peoples’ diet, as indicated
in Figure 7.3.
More than half of the respondents from throughout Roviana Lagoon indicated that it was
important to fish in deep water passages in order to feed their family. This was highlighted
earlier in reference to the study by Hamilton and Walter (1999) who found that village fishers
caught species of mara in the passages en route to and from the open sea to the lagoon. Given
that the LRFFT target species occur prominently in the diet of Roviana respondents, it is clear
that there is a reticence to exploit the species for money if the scale of the return is deemed to
be insufficient. Low prices received and high losses of live fish left Roviana fishers less than
enthusiastic to see the LRFFT return.
Like Marovo Lagoon, proposed seasonal closures of spawning aggregation sites in deep water
passages would temporarily affect the normal subsistence fishing activities of about half the
respondents from Roviana Lagoon. However, due to the apparent importance of the species in
question, or at least the importance of other species that might be affected by intensive fishing
of the passages, the longer term benefits should be considered. As mentioned previously,
closure would likely entail about 10 days per month for three months of the year.
About 40 percent of respondents from the Saikile chiefly district considered fishing in the
passages during the grouper spawning to earn money to be important. This compares with half
that number in the Kalikoqu district. Saikile is the more remote area of the lagoon, situated
furthest from Munda and its markets. It is an area that is not as well endowed with income
earning opportunities compared with the areas closer to markets. However, the overall
proportion of respondents who considered fishing in deep water passages during the spawning
season to be important was not substantial.
149
On the contrary, more than 90 percent of respondents from all villages recognised the
importance of not fishing in the passages during the spawning season. This implies a
willingness to accept the wisdom behind temporary closures of deepwater passages that are
known to host grouper spawning aggregations. Establishment of protected areas where no
fishing is permitted was also widely seen as important, indicating in-principle support for
closures.
Figure 7.7 indicates a relatively homogenous response to questions regarding issues to do
with management. The importance of traditional customary rights and associated rules that
govern them was most significant among villagers from the Kalikoqu chiefly district. There is
not, however, overwhelming belief in the importance of customary rights and the level of
respect for such rights that exists, for example, in Ontong Java. Just 60 percent of Saikile
respondents declared the importance of such rights and respect for them. This reflects some
erosion of traditional authority, which should be expected in an area that is in relatively close
proximity to a commercial centre. Aswani (1997) noted, however, that there is adherence to
traditional law regarding fishing and the boundaries of marine estates.
More than two thirds of all respondents acknowledged the importance of the LRFFT
moratorium and less than one third believed that lifting the moratorium was important.
Fishers were unconcerned about the loss of a source of income from the LRFFT because there
are other sources of income so they needn’t rely on any one means of making a living. This
gives Roviana chiefs a powerful negotiating edge when prospective LRFFT operators seek to
buy live fish from their reefs.
150
Chapter 8: Socio-economics and the Impact of the LRFFT in Ontong Java
8.1 Introduction
Ontong Java, an atoll of Malaita Province, was the first island in the Solomons sighted by
Alvaro de Mendana during his first expedition across the Central Pacific, when one of his four
ships was nearly wrecked near the atolls on February 1, 1568. However, it was Abel Tasman
who found the atoll and named it Ontong Java on March 22, 1643. Another explorer, Captain
Hunter, saw the atoll in 1791 and named it Lord Howe. Ontong Java was under German
administration or rule from 1893 to 1899 before it was transferred to Britain. Ontong Java is a
50 km boot-shaped atoll made up of 122 islands lying just south of the equator and 258 km
north of Santa Isabel. Approximately 57 km long and 50 km wide with a total population of
1,700 Polynesian inhabitants, Ontong Java is the largest lagoon in the Solomon Sea, and is the
country’s northernmost point. The total land area is only 12 km2 with the widest stretch of dry
ground on the islands of Luaniua (population 1,300) and Pelau (400 people) measuring only
one kilometre. The average width of many of its islands is only a third of this. No island is
higher than 13m above sea level, with most islands barely two to three metres high and
composed mostly of coral debris (see Figure 8.1).
Apart from the two main villages of Luaniua and Pelau, a few other islands have temporary
shelters where a small number of about 50 people now live almost permanently. The two
populated islands have freshwater swamps where natural depressions have been artificially
deepened for mulching pits to cultivate taro crops, a staple diet on the atoll. Coastal areas
consist of narrow strips of coconut palms and scrub, mainly on the ocean side. Besides
collecting bêche-de-mer and trochus shells for the Hong Kong market, the people of Ontong
Java have few income earning opportunities. Houses are built flush to the ground with a
network of poles forming the frame with the roof thatched with pandanus leaves.
151
Figure 8.1. Ontong Java Atoll.
Table 8.1. Participating villages and their community affiliations
Luaniua Pelau
Village No. Households Village No. Households
Luaniua 70 Pelau 30
152
8.2 Results
8.2.1 Sample Description
Ontong Java is comprised of people from two clan-based groups that are situated remotely
from each other, and as such have means and needs that effect different socio-economic
environments. Respondents from the Luaniua community comprised 70 percent of the sample
(see Table 8.1). A noticeable factor is the narrow margin that exists between average income
and average expenditure in the 25-75 percentile range. More than half of respondents from
Luaniua fished in the LRFFT but the overwhelming majority (86.7 percent) of respondents
from Pelau participated in the fishery. Most fishers did not make a lot of money by fishing in
the LRFFT. As Table 8.2 indicates, average earnings in the mid range were less than $500 in
Luaniua and $700 in Pelau. The more successful fishers in the trade belonged to the Pelau
community where the average earnings in the top 25 percentile ($3,060) were some $1,200
greater than their neighbours at Luaniua.
There was considerable LRFFT bycatch in Ontong Java. Operators bought an average of just
more than half the fish caught. The bycatch in Luaniua was either taken back to the village or
was consumed at remote camps, established near spawning aggregation sites. In Pelau,
however, more than three quarters of the bycatch was taken to fisher’s camps and just five
percent was taken home to the village. Fishers in both communities are seeking greater
remuneration for the live catch, seeking to be paid about five times the previous rate of $5/kg
and $1/kg for the village.
The Anglican Church is the dominant faith on the atoll, although there are a small number of
CFC worshippers in Pelau. Division within Ontong Java is drawn along boundaries of
traditional ownership. In Ontong Java there are two Houses of Chiefs, one in each of the
principal villages of Pelau and Luaniua. The high chiefs from each House have a very strong
say in both the running of the community and the administration of its sea and land resources
(refer to Chapter 8 for more detailed discussion of this system). The population of Ontong
Java is subject to the rules imposed by one or both of these Houses of Chiefs.
153
Table 8.2. Characteristics of the sample in Ontong Java.
Ontong Java Luaniua Pelau
% Households Surveyed 25 25
No. Respondents 70 (70.0% of OJ total) 30 (30.0% of OJ total)
Av. Size of Household 6.8 5.6
Av. Age of Respondent 39.0 44.9
Fished in the LRFFT 39 (55.7% of Lu. total) 26 (86.7% of Pe. total)
Mean Income and Expend - 1999 Income Expend. Income Expend.
0% to 25% range ($) 1,190 1,366 841 1,012
25% to 75% range ($) 4,939 3,811 3,624 3,218
75% to 100% range ($) 16,372 9,166 12,237 6,484
Mean Income and Expend - LRFFT Income Expend. Income Expend.
0% to 25% range ($) 95 55 127 30
25% to 75% range ($) 492 181 700 115
75% to 100% range ($) 1,850 450 3,060 200
LRFFT Bycatch Mean Mean
% of the catch that Co. bought 58.9 51.5
Bycatch Use (%) Mean Mean
Taken to the village 43.1 5.4
Eaten at fishers camp 48.5 78.1
Sold at a market 0.0 0.0
Fed to captive live fish 2.1 5.0
Discarded 0.3 7.3
Released 6.2 4.2
Price Responsiveness Median Median
Co. should pay the fisher ($/kg) 30.00 25.00
Co. should pay the village ($/kg) 5.00 7.00
8.2.2 Activities of the Household
Throughout Ontong Java, participation by respondents in household activities was
dramatically reduced during the LRFFT. Figure 8.2 indicates that a large percentage of men
from Luaniua ceased to conduct normal household activities during the LRFFT. The activity
of Luaniua women, on the other hand, was only marginally affected during the LRFFT.
Women’s participation in copra production declined sharply but any other reduction in
participation was minimal.
In Pelau, a high proportion of both men and women of the household ceased to undertake the
nominated household activities during the LRFFT. This included teaching children in the
154
ways of traditional knowledge and attendance at Church. Undertaking of these activities by
women in Pelau was affected to a far greater extent than women in Luaniua.
Figure 8.2. Householder participation and hours spent per week conducting particular
activities in the presence and absence of the LRFFT in Ontong Java.
NB. Sample size pertaining to Figure 8.2.
n Men Women
1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT
Luaniua 70 38 66 38
Pelau 30 26 28 24
8.2.3 Fishing Effort
Table 8.3 indicates that respondents from Pelau exerted far more individual fishing effort
during the LRFFT than respondents from Luaniua. Fishing effort in the household fishery
varied little throughout the lagoon, with respondents generally making two or three trips per
week for an average duration of five or six hours. There was a dramatic increase, in both
sections of the lagoon, in weekly fishing activity during the operation of the LRFFT from that
exerted in 1999. Pelau respondents reported median weekly fishing effort during the LRFFT
Luaniua - Men
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
Pa
rtic
ipa
tio
n (
%)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
Luaniua - Women
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
Ho
urs
pe
r W
ee
k
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
Pelau - Men
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
Pa
rtic
ipa
tio
n (
%)
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
Pelau - Women
0
20
40
60
80
100
Gardening Repairs Art Copra Teaching Church
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
Ho
urs
pe
r W
ee
k
1999 % LRFFT % 1999 Hrs/wk LRFFT Hrs/wk
155
of 60 hours (average of 55.6 hours). Results from Luaniua recorded a median score of 36
hours per week (average of 35.1 hours) during the LRFFT. There was no “eskies” fishery in
operation in Ontong Java.
Table 8.3. Comparison of fishing effort in 1999 and during the LRFFT in Ontong Java.
Ontong Java No. householders No. trips/wk No. hrs/trip No. hrs/wk
1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT
Luaniua n 70 38 67 39 67 39 67 39
Mean 1.3 1.3 2.6 4.9 4.8 6.8 12.2 35.1
Median 1.0 1.0 2.0 6.0 5.0 7.0 12.0 36.0
Pelau n 30 26 30 26 30 26 30 26
Mean 1.3 1.3 2.7 5.7 6.1 9.7 16.9 55.6
Median 1.0 1.0 3.0 6.0 6.0 10.0 15.5 60.0
8.2.4 Fishing Catch
Table 8.4 indicates that fishers from both Luaniua and Pelau recorded similar catch rates
whilst fishing for the household of around 20 fish. The grouper component of this catch was
not dissimilar at three or four groupers per trip. Pelau participants in the LRFFT caught
significantly more fish whilst fishing for the trade than they did while fishing for the
household, whereas there was little increase in the catch during the trade by Luaniua
participants. The proportion of groupers in the catch during the LRFFT was found to be
almost three times that caught whilst fishing for the household.
Table 8.4. Comparison of total catch, and the component of which were groupers, between
fishing activity in 1999 and during the LRFFT in Ontong Java.
Ontong Java Total no. fish caught per
trip
No. serranids caught per
trip
Serranid proportion of
catch
1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT
Luaniua n 67 39 67 39
Mean 20.8 23.7 3.9 12.1 18.6% 51.1%
Median 20.0 22.0 3.0 10.0
Pelau n 30 26 30 26
Mean 22.7 41.3 3.7 18.6 16.3% 45.0%
Median 22.0 37.5 3.0 14.0
156
8.2.5 Frequency of Consumption of LRFFT Species
The most outstanding feature of the results presented in Figure 8.3 is that the species
commonly targeted for the LRFFT feature prominently in the diet of respondents from
Luaniua, particularly during the spawning season. The species do not, however, feature as
prominently in the diet of respondents from Pelau regardless of season. Frequent consumption
of these species in Pelau is minimal and varies little throughout the year.
Figure 8.3. Consumption and consumption frequency of LRFFT target species in Ontong
Java.
NB. Luaniua: n = 70; and Pelau: n = 30.
Consumption of LRFFT Target Species - Spawning Season
0
20
40
60
80
100
Plectropomus
areolatus
Epinephelus
polyphekadion
Epinephelus
fuscoguttatus
Plectropomus
leopardus
Variola louti Plectropomus
oligacanthus
Pe
rce
nt th
at e
at ta
rge
t sp
ecie
s
0
20
40
60
80
100
Pe
rce
nt th
at e
at "D
aily-t
o-W
ee
kly
"
Luaniua % that eat target species Pelau % that eat target species
Luaniua % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly" Pelau % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly"
Consumption of LRFFT Target Species - Non-Spawning Season
0
20
40
60
80
100
Plectropomus
areolatus
Epinephelus
polyphekadion
Epinephelus
fuscoguttatus
Plectropomus
leopardus
Variola louti Plectropomus
oligacanthus
Pe
rce
nt th
at e
at ta
rge
t sp
ecie
s
0
20
40
60
80
100
Pe
rce
nt th
at e
at "D
aily-t
o-W
ee
kly
"
Luaniua % that eat target species Pelau % that eat target species
Luaniua % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly" Pelau % that eat "Daily-to-Weekly"
157
In Luaniua, more than three quarters of respondents reported that the three main species
(Plectropomus areolatus, Epinephelus polyphekadion and E. fuscoguttatus) featured in their
diet outside of spawning season. During this time, more than 80 percent said that they ate all
six of the nominated species. There was a marked difference in the occurrence of
consumption of the species on a daily to weekly basis between seasons. Figure 8.3 shows that
during the spawning season, 86 percent of Luaniua respondents frequently ate P. areolatus,
compared to just 20 percent outside of this time. Whereas all the nominated species featured
prominently in the diet of Luaniua respondents, consumption of P. leopardus and P.
oligacanthus were least common, particularly outside of the spawning season. Consumption
of Variola louti, however, remained frequent throughout the year in Luaniua with more than
half of the respondents reporting eating the species at least once per week outside of the
spawning season and about 90 percent reporting the same during the spawning season.
Respondents from Pelau reported that the key LRFFT target species did not feature
prominently in their diet. Less than 60 percent reported that P. areolatus and E. fuscoguttatus
featured in their diet at all and just 20 percent reported frequent consumption of these species.
E. polyphekadion, P. leopardus and P. oligacanthus were consumed on a frequent basis by
just a small number of respondents. The exception to this trend was that of V. louti, which
featured in the diet of nearly 70 percent of Pelau respondents’ diets throughout the year, with
more than a quarter reporting that they eat the species at least once per week.
Clearly, the LRFFT target species form an integral component of the diet of respondents from
Luaniua. Table 8.5 illustrates the percentage of respondents that reported eating each of the
six nominated species on a daily basis. This reinforces the disparity displayed in Figure 8.3
that exists between the two Ontong Java communities with regard to the importance not only
of the LRFFT target species but also of the importance of seasonal spawning aggregations as
a food resource.
158
Table 8.5. Occurrence of everyday consumption of LRFFT target species in Ontong Java.
8.2.6 Income and Expenditure
Income
The outstanding feature of the income analysis for the two communities in Ontong Java,
illustrated in Figure 8.4, is the paucity of income earning opportunities available to
householders. There is no market for the finfish resource in the absence of the LRFFT and the
management regime for the bêche-de-mer and trochus resources is such that exploitation is
conducted on an alternating basis of one year for bêche-de-mer and the following for trochus.
Figure 8.4. Income by source (SI$) in the 25-75% range for householders in Ontong Java.
NB. Luaniua: n = 70; and Pelau: n = 30.
Consume Everyday (%) Luaniua Pelau
Spawning Not
Spawning Spawning
Not
Spawning
Plectropomus areolatus 20.0 4.3 0.0 0.0
Epinephelus polyphekadion 15.7 8.6 0.0 0.0
Epinephelus fuscoguttatus 14.3 8.6 0.0 0.0
Plectropomus leopardus 12.9 7.1 0.0 0.0
Variola louti 15.7 10.0 3.3 3.3
Plectropomus oligacanthus 7.1 4.3 0.0 0.0
Income and Income Sources
0
20
40
60
80
100
Eskies Beche-
de-mer
Trochus Copra Farming Art Wages Business Relative LRFFT
Pe
rce
nt th
at E
arn
ed
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
5,000
6,000
7,000
8,000
Av. In
co
me
- 2
5%
-75
% R
an
ge
Luaniua % that Earned Pelau % that Earned Luaniua Income 25%-75% Pelau Income 25%-75%
159
Participation in each source of income from either community is not dissimilar. Diving for
bêche-de-mer and producing copra were the sources that attracted the most participation in
1999. Average income in the 25-75 percentile group from Luaniua from bêche-de-mer was
more than two and a half times that received by Pelau respondents. Table 8.6 indicates that
the top 25 percent of earners from Luaniua in that fishery made an average exceeding double
that of earners from Pelau. Most Ontong Java respondents made some money from producing
copra. However, the returns from this source are minimal with the average earning in the mid
range not exceeding $1,000. The small number that earned a wage or held business interests
made the most money in 1999, consistent with Marovo and Roviana Lagoons. Fishing in the
LRFFT was not lucrative for the majority of participants.
Table 8.6. Average income by source for respondents from Ontong Java.
Luaniua Pelau Average Income
($ in 1999) 0-25% 25-75% 75-100% 0-25% 25-75% 75-100%
Eskies 0 0 0 0 0 0
Bêche-de-mer 689 3,253 8,500 299 1,230 4,071
Trochus 0 0 0 0 0 0
Copra 233 974 3,014 283 738 1,550
Farming 65 250 500 50 220 500
Art 5 34 283 0 0 0
Wages 250 5,261 16,800 4,800 8,000 10,800
Business 1,475 4,467 14,333 0 500 10,000
Relative 140 350 571 300 650 2,000
Total 1,315 5,053 15,567 841 3,609 12,237
LRFFT 129 524 2,086 137 640 3,060
Expenditure
An outstanding feature of the expenditure analysis for Ontong Java is the narrow margin that
exists between average income and average expenditure in the 25-75 percentile, particularly
in Pelau. The main items of expenditure throughout the atoll are attributed to school fees,
Church contributions, fuel for transport and lighting, food and tobacco. Figure 8.5 illustrates
that some disparity exists between communities, particularly with regard to expenditure on
fuel and tobacco. Food was found to be, by far, the item of greatest expenditure where both
communities spent an average of more than $1,400 in 1999 in the 25-75 percentile for
160
expenditure. This expense equates to almost 29 percent of average income in Luaniua and
almost 40 percent of average income in Pelau in the 25-75 percentile range. Figure 8.5
indicates that Luaniua respondents spent an average, in the mid range, of $843 on fuel for
transport and lighting in 1999, compared to $521 in Pelau. Table 8.7 indicates that Luaniua
respondents that spent on fuel in the upper 25 percentile did so at three times the level of
those in Pelau. Three quarters of Luaniua respondents spent money on tobacco, compared to
just over half from Pelau. However, the average expenditure on tobacco in the mid range in
Luaniua was just over half that spent in Pelau. In the upper range, Table 8.7 indicates that an
average of $1,114 was spent in Luaniua, some $200 more than that which was spent in Pelau.
Average expenditure on tobacco in Pelau in the mid range was about the same as that which
was spent on fuel for transport and lighting. Table 8.7 indicates that average total expenditure
in the upper 25 percentile was more than $2,600 above that which was spent by Pelau
respondents in the same bracket.
Figure 8.5. Expenditure by item in the 25-75% range for respondents from Ontong Java.
NB. Luaniua: n = 70; and Pelau: n = 30.
Expenditure and Expenditure Sources
0
20
40
60
80
100
School Church Marriage Fuel Food Clothing Medical Fishing Tobacco LRFFT
Pe
rce
nt th
at S
pe
nt
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
1,600
Av. E
xp
en
d. -
25
%-7
5%
Ra
ng
e
Luaniua % that Spent Pelau % that Spent Luaniua Expend. 25%-75% Pelau Expend. 25%-75%
161
Table 8.7. Average expenditure by item for respondents from Ontong Java.
Expenditure Luaniua Pelau
Averages ($) 0-25% 25-75% 75-100% 0-25% 25-75% 75-100%
School 26 177 1,078 10 283 1,562
Church 8 46 274 13 52 350
Marriage 77 305 1,513 43 181 1,220
Fuel 71 843 2,820 67 521 970
Food 481 1,459 3,182 689 1,418 3,254
Clothing 134 409 1,200 76 264 630
Medical 17 90 800 10 65 300
Fishing 22 57 439 12 53 156
Tobacco 112 284 1,114 142 531 961
Total 1,366 3,811 9,166 1,012 3,218 6,484
LRFFT 55 181 450 30 115 200
8.2.7 Perceptions of Importance
Responses to questions regarding perceptions of importance regarding issues affecting the
management of the LRFFT in Ontong Java displayed conviction to the maintenance of custom
and tradition. Figure 8.6 illustrates that more than 90 percent of respondents believe that
spawning aggregations are important to having the resource in the future. A small percentage,
mostly in Luaniua, believes that it is important to target grouper spawning aggregations for
food and income, inferring that the majority do not hold this view. Most respondents in both
communities believe it is important to not fish in deepwater passages during the spawning
season and there is overwhelming support for the concept of protected areas.
162
Figure 8.6. Respondents from Ontong Java that believed issues surrounding spawning
aggregations were important.
NB. Luaniua: n = 70; and Pelau: n = 30.
Almost all Ontong Java respondents described customary rights to fishing areas and
respecting these rights as important (Figure 8.7). This suggests that there is a solid base for
the establishment of community-based co-management of the LRFFT within the lagoon. A
similar proportion of Ontong Java respondents recognised the importance of the moratorium,
although this view was held slightly more widely in the Pelau community. Just 37 percent of
Luaniua respondents considered it important to lift the moratorium, while this view was held
by more than two thirds of Pelau respondents. Just 20 percent of Luaniua respondents
considered adopting modern fisheries management to be important. In Pelau, where greater
effort was exerted during the conduct of the LRFFT, nearly two thirds of respondents
considered it important to adopt modern fisheries management.
0
20
40
60
80
100
Spawning
aggregations to
having groupers
in the future
Fishing in
passages during
spawning season
to feed the family
Fishing in
passages during
spawning season
to make money
Not fishing in
passages during
the spawning
season
Protected areas
ie. no fishing
Responses o
f "I
mport
ant"
(%
)
Luaniua
Pelau
163
Figure 8.7. Respondents from Ontong Java that believed issues surrounding management
were important.
NB. Luaniua: n = 70; and Pelau: n = 30.
The paucity of income earning opportunities and the absence of a market for the atoll’s finfish
resource is ample encouragement for fishers to join the LRFFT. Customary rights and
traditions are strong in Ontong Java. The resolve to dictate the manner in which marine
resources are exploited was demonstrated when the leaders of the Pelau community
confiscated gear belonging to the LRFFT operator following a dispute over the royalty
payment. Leaders from the Luaniua community endorsed the action and withdrew from
participation in the fishery.
The two main sources of income in Ontong Java from marine resource exploitation are
trochus and bêche-de-mer. However, the susceptibility of these species to overexploitation has
led to various attempts to modify fishing effort. The regimen in place at the time of the pilot
survey in 1999 involved collecting trochus and bêche-de-mer in alternate years, but this was
modified so that bêche-de-mer could be collected for a one-month period from mid-
November during the trochus year so that villagers could pay annual school fees. It was later
further modified to alternating six-month periods. Clearly, Ontong Java cannot sustainably
exploit the invertebrates discussed and adequately meet its cash needs. Exploitation of the
0
20
40
60
80
100
Customary rights
regarding fishing
areas
Respect for
customary rights
The moratorium
banning live fish
export
Lifting the
moratorium
Adopting modern
fisheries
management
Responses o
f "I
mport
ant"
(%
)Luaniua
Pelau
164
finfish resource might help meet these needs while allowing some level of replenishment of
the trochus and bêche-de-mer resources.
8.3 Discussion
8.3.1 Perceived Necessity for the LRFFT in Ontong Java
Ontong Java is remote. This precludes access to markets for perishable commodities such as
finfish. Income earning opportunities are very limited, with most men diving alternately for
trochus and bêche-de-mer. Women in Ontong Java tend not to go fishing. There is limited
marketing of garden produce due to the nature of the geography and little margin exists
between average income and average expenditure for most people. The dearth of income
earning opportunities and the absence of a market for the finfish resource encouraged many
Ontong Java fishers into the LRFFT. When the trade was in operation, however, village chiefs
in Pelau confiscated the gear belonging to the LRFFT company as a result of reluctance, by
the company, to pay the agreed royalty. There was also concern from the Chiefs regarding the
high level of post-harvest fish mortality. Interviews with fishers, conducted in November
1999, indicated that fishers were eager for the moratorium to be lifted, but were keenly aware
of the need to manage the fishery and to secure an equitable outcome for fishers and for the
community as a whole.
The desire to participate in live fishing activities is strongest in the northern community of
Pelau. Income and expenditure results arising from this study revealed that for income earners
in the 25-75 percentile, there was little separating average income from average expenditure.
At the time of the survey, alternating closures of trochus and bêche-de-mer were in operation.
In 1999, bêche-de-mer divers from Luaniua averaged more than double that which was earned
by divers from Pelau in each percentile division (see Table 8.6). The paucity of income
earning opportunities and the lack of any commercial exploitation of finfish resources
attracted a high proportion of fishers to the LRFFT. In Pelau, where 87 percent of respondents
fished in the trade (Table 8.2), the desire for a potentially lucrative income source is clearly
evident. However, the structure of the trade as it operated gave rise to problems of wastage
due to the selectivity of the species to be exported and in holding facilities. Problems that
arose from the reticence of the operator to pay the agreed royalty payment to the village
caused indignation among villagers and their leaders. Figure 8.7 indicates that all the Pelau
respondents were in support of the moratorium on the issue of new licenses to export live fish
until a plan of management could be implemented. Around 70 percent of Pelau respondents
165
now believe that it is important to lift the moratorium. The perception in Ontong Java is that
the LRFFT is an opportunity to make money from hitherto unexploited resources but that the
trade should be managed efficiently and under the terms of the traditional decision making
hierarchy.
8.3.2 Impact of the LRFFT on Village Households in Ontong Java
Under the former structure of the LRFFT, villagers in Ontong Java, as in Marovo and Roviana
Lagoons, dedicated their time to the trade because of the limited time frame that the buyer
would be in the vicinity. Figure 8.2 indicates that the extent to which men dedicated time to
fishing in the trade had a significant impact on the day-to-day conduct of village and
household activities. Again, it was the eager participation of Pelau fishers that created the
biggest impact on normal household life. Table 8.2 indicates that nearly half of the
respondents from Luaniua consumed LRFFT bycatch at remote camps, established by fishers
in close proximity to spawning aggregation sites. For the period of the peak spawning
activity, men would be absent from the village, returning on the weekends to attend Church
services before returning to the camps.
For Pelau fishers, however, nearly 80 percent of respondents indicated that this was the
pattern during the operation of the trade. When at the camps the Pelau fishers vigorously
exerted fishing effort. Table 8.3 indicates that an average of 55.6 hours per week were spent
fishing for the trade by Pelau fishers. This is more than 20 hours per week more than the
average effort exerted by fishers from Luaniua and an indication of the desire to make as
much money as possible in the short time frame afforded to them. Aside from the conduct of
normal household activities alluded to in Figure 8.2, the provision of fresh fish for family
members in the village suffered as a result of this mode and extent of participation in the live
fishery. In Luaniua, 43 percent of LRFFT bycatch was taken back to the village for household
consumption. However, in Pelau, little more than five percent of this bycatch was consumed
in the village. This places greater emphasis on gleaning of nearby reefs by women, exploiting
the limited potential for the provision of fresh garden produce and the increased reliance on
packaged foods. This in turn creates a further suite of problems. Greater need to purchase
food requires more money. Also, there is little provision for the disposal of packaging from
imported foodstuffs. The disposal of inorganic waste is a growing problem even in the
absence of the LRFFT. Exacerbating this problem, however, intensifies a potential hazard in
that tin cans with jagged and rusting edges sometimes litter the nearshore environment, an
area that is frequented by all members of the village.
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Participation in the trade, to the extent that respondents from Pelau undertook in particular in
the short window of opportunity, places strain on village women to perform tasks that would
otherwise be undertaken by men. The three-month period during which the operator bought
live fish created an upheaval to normal village life in both Ontong Java communities. Year
round live fish operations with spawning season closures should be considered. As with
Marovo and Roviana Lagoons, the development viability of a chilled fishery exporting to
Honiara should also be examined. Table 8.2 indicates that the LRFFT operator bought just
half of the catch during the LRFFT. An alternative market for the incidental catch would add
value to the live fishery and eradicate much of the wastage. During informal discussions in
October 1999, a Pelau fisher stated that many fishers did not know what to do with a fish that
was bloated when they had brought it to the surface from deeper water. These fish usually
died in storage.
8.3.3 Significance of the LRFFT Target Species in Ontong Java
Disparity exists between the two communities with regard to the significance of the LRFFT
target species. Respondents from Luaniua reported that the LRFFT species feature
prominently in their diet, especially during the spawning season when the frequency of
consumption of these species increases markedly. Pelau respondents, however, indicated that
the species do not constitute a significant component of their diet, regardless of season. In
informal discussions during the conduct of the pilot survey, a fisher in Pelau mentioned that
people do not like the taste of these species. The overwhelming majority of respondents from
Luaniua reported that, during the spawning season, they would eat the nominated species at
least once per week (see Figure 8.3). Table 8.7 indicates that respondents from Luaniua spent
considerably more on fuel on average than those from Pelau. This could indicate that more
outboard motors are owned in Luaniua whereby access to passages is more easily achieved.
The village of Luaniua is in closer proximity to a deepwater passage than is Pelau. Pelau
fishers that own outboard motors are conscious of the availability and cost of fuel and are
conservative with the use of the motors.
The disparity is highlighted by results presented in Table 8.3, which indicates daily
consumption of the nominated LRFFT target species. Even when the species are not
aggregating to spawn, between five and 10 percent of Luaniua respondents reported eating the
species every day. This proportion grew significantly during the spawning season. Pelau
respondents, on the other hand, did not report consuming any of the nominated species on a
daily basis, regardless of season, with the exception of three percent who regularly consume
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V. louti. The implications of these results are that there is scant willingness on behalf of
fishers from Pelau to preserve the resource as a food source. There is, however, a strong
disposition within the leadership at Pelau to protect the resources within their marine estate,
whether the resource is for food or trade, or whether it is because they are the custodians and
thereby charged with the wise use of the resource.
Given the paucity of income earning opportunities on the atoll and the absence of a market for
the finfish resources, it is understandable that fishers seized the opportunity to dedicate a
vigorous effort to the LRFFT prior to the confiscation of the company property by the Pelau
chiefs. It is a testimony, however, to the resolve of the community leaders that such
opportunity was seen in its proper perspective and the trade was discontinued in favour of
waiting until a plan emphasising sustainable resource exploitation could be formulated.
Exploitation of the spawning aggregations requires conservation measures to avert collapse of
the resource base, whether for subsistence fishing or for income. Almost all respondents from
both communities indicated that they believed spawning aggregations were important to
having these species in the future. A similar proportion believed it was important to avoid
fishing in deepwater passages during the spawning season, although a slightly smaller
proportion of Pelau respondents believe so. More than 90 percent of all respondents indicated
that it was important to establish protected areas where no fishing was permitted (Figure 8.6).
This suggests that fishers are well aware of the importance of the aggregations and equally
aware of the need to limit the intensity with which such aggregations are targeted.
8.3.4 Income Opportunities and the Cost of Living in Ontong Java
Ontong Java, as a whole, is characterised by a dearth of income earning opportunities.
Whereas Marovo and Roviana Lagoons have a market for finfish in eskies to Honiara, tourists
to buy artwork and volcanic soils to produce garden vegetables, Ontong Java relies on the
alternating exploitation of bêche-de-mer and trochus and the poor returns from the production
of copra. As Figure 8.4 illustrates, the very few respondents who have wage employment or
have business interests on the atoll earn the highest income.
The survey related to earnings in 1999 when the bêche-de-mer fishery was operating.
Consequently, there is no indication as to the typical earnings from trochus. Figure 8.4
indicates that all respondents from Pelau dived for bêche-de-mer, compared to about 90
percent from Luaniua. The fact that that management of bêche-de-mer and trochus stocks has
attracted the attention of village leaders from both communities is testimony to the concern
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over the resource base in the light of the extent of exploitation. Careful development of
sustainable fin fisheries in Ontong Java would relieve pressure on stocks of bêche-de-mer and
trochus while providing an income for people who would otherwise be very limited in
opportunity.
The cost of living experienced by survey respondents in both communities was concentrated
in costs associated with the purchase of food, fuel for transport and lighting, school fees and
tobacco. Almost 80 percent of Luaniua respondents spent money on tobacco. Average
expenditure on tobacco in the middle range was greater than that spent on school fees. More
than half of Pelau respondents were smokers but their average expenditure in the middle
range was akin to that spent on fuel for food and lighting. The narrow margin that exists
between average income and average expenditure does not afford villagers security in the
event of any sudden financial need.
The LRFFT offered fishers the opportunity to make money in a short time frame. However,
average earnings from participation by those in the 25-75 percentile were not significant. For
those in the upper 25 percent of earners, however, the return was worthwhile. This should be
measured against the extent of fishing effort and the opportunity costs associated with such
effort, including neglect of household and village duties, one of which is the regular provision
of fresh food for the family. In Luaniua, the average earnings in the upper 25 percent of
earners was more than $2,000 but this was about two thirds of the average earning of the
upper 25 percent of copra producers. In Pelau, the upper 25 percent of earners from the
LRFFT were rewarded for their additional effort and averaged more than $3,000. This
equated to about three quarters of the average earnings of the upper 25 percent of bêche-de-
mer divers. The live fishery has the potential to earn fishers an improved income but if the
fishery were to maintain concentration on seasonal spawning aggregations, the life of the
fishery would be limited to the short period prior to the collapse of the aggregations (see
Johannes, 1999 and the review in Chapter 2).
8.3.5 The Grouper Resource and its Management in Ontong Java
Responses to questions regarding the importance of the grouper resource and the manner in
which it is managed demonstrated little variation between the communities of the atoll. Figure
8.6 indicates that almost all Ontong Java respondents understood that the occurrence of
spawning aggregations was important to having grouper species in the future. This is an
excellent basis for acceptance of the proposed seasonal closures of fishing on grouper
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spawning aggregation sites. Figure 8.6 also indicates that few respondents saw the importance
of fishing in deep water passages during the spawning season, whether it is for food or for
money. A larger proportion of Luaniua respondents thought that it was important. Given the
dietary component filled by LRFFT target species for Luaniua respondents (see Figure 8.3), it
might have been expected that the proportion that saw the importance of fishing in the
passages during the spawning season would be higher.
More than 90 percent of respondents from both villages recognised the importance of not
fishing in the passages during the spawning season. This implies a willingness to accept the
wisdom behind temporary closures of deepwater passages that are known to host grouper
spawning aggregations. Establishment of protected areas where no fishing is permitted was
also widely seen as important, indicating in-principle support for closures. In Pelau, this
support has already been put in to action in that the chiefs of the village have already declared
a wildlife sanctuary within their marine estate with enthusiastic support from Pelau fishers.
Figure 8.7 indicates overwhelming support for the importance of customary rights regarding
fishing areas and the respect for such rights. Moreover, in communities with a dearth of
income earning opportunities and ever-increasing integration into the cash economy, support
for the importance of the moratorium was almost unanimous. There is, however, a difference
between the views of the two communities with regard to the lifting of the moratorium.
Nearly 70 percent of Pelau respondents believe it is important to lift the moratorium whilst
this was the view of just 40 percent of respondents from Luaniua. Income and expenditure
results in this study indicate that people in Luaniua are generally better off than their
neighbours in Pelau. The paucity of income opportunities and the great willingness to fish in
the LRFFT as indicated in Table 8.3 indicates that as much as the trade was not conducted in
the manner that was acceptable to village chiefs, it is a potentially lucrative source of income
and village fishers are eager to fish in it again. A small percentage of Luaniua respondents
saw the importance of adopting modern fisheries management techniques. However, in Pelau
this was supported by more than 60 percent of respondents. The basis for successful
implementation of a co-management approach to the LRFFT in Ontong Java is clearly
apparent. Strong leadership and adherence to traditional customary laws and values are
pivotal to the establishment of the LRFFT on a sustainable basis.
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Chapter 9: Conclusions and Recommendations
9.1 Conclusions
This study formed the major research component of the ACIAR funded project. The findings
have been used to help determine initiatives to be included in the plan of management that
arose from the final consultative workshop in Honiara in November 2001. In general, there is
a desire to participate in the LRFFT throughout the regions studied. Determination to rejoin
the fishery, however, varied among the regions that previously hosted the trade. Determining
factors were found to include the extent of integration into the cash economy and the ability to
make the money needed in this growing economic environment. As such, the range of income
earning opportunities was a major factor in the decision to participate in the fishery.
In Marovo Lagoon, fishers wanted the moratorium to be lifted so they can restart selling their
fish to the live reef fish operators, but at a price substantially higher than was previously
received. The target species do not feature prominently in the diet of villagers and the cash
needs of the villagers, particularly those from the SDA villages, were significant. Costs
associated with attendance at Church schools and a desire to fulfil Church targets required a
significant and ongoing income stream. Many villagers saw the wisdom in the moratorium but
were eager to resume fishing in the LRFFT.
The communities in Roviana Lagoon were largely unconcerned about the moratorium since
they saw the LRFFT as just another income generating activity in an area where many such
opportunities exist, given the proximity to Munda and its markets. There is also a belief that
the intention of the Fisheries Division in imposing the moratorium is to help them find ways
to improve their fish resources and therefore is a positive step. The lagoon is smaller than
Marovo and villagers often fish in deep water passages for food, primarily for trevally
species, but it was found that LRFFT target species also feature prominently the their diet.
In Ontong Java, fishers did not like the market arrangements demanded by the live reef food
fish operators, so they chose not to participate in the trade. However, due to the remoteness of
the atoll and high population growth they are seeking income streams, as presently there is a
dearth of income earning opportunities. There is strong community affiliation in Ontong Java
and equally strong leadership. There is currently no market for finfish resources and a
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properly managed LRFFT will benefit the community whilst relieving pressure on stocks of
trochus and bêche-de-mer.
Fishers exerted extraordinary fishing effort during the LRFFT in all regions. This impacted
significantly on the conduct of normal household and village duties. Many fishers established
remote camps on islands in close proximity to spawning aggregation sites and would return to
the village on weekends. This was particularly prevalent in Ontong Java and more
specifically, in Pelau. Men dedicated all of their time to targeting spawning aggregations.
Village and household duties, including the daily provision of fresh food, suffered as a result.
The LRFFT, in the manner that it was conducted prior to the moratorium, was a shock event
in the lives of villagers throughout the study areas. Ontong Java was most affected and this
reflects the strong desire to participate in the trade and this in turn reflects the desire to fulfil
growing cash needs in this remote atoll. Generally, there was little separating average income
from average expenditure for those earning in the 25-75 percentile in Ontong Java. The lower
25 percent of income earners often spent more than they earned, creating greater cash needs
for their families.
There is a large amount of community cohesion in the three areas studied. Custom tenure
boundaries are well known and respected. Fishers have an extraordinary knowledge of the
undersea environment in their home reefs and the dynamics of life contained therein. The
basis for community managed commercial fishing activities is sound. A seasonal closure of
spawning aggregation sites is strongly recommended as a prerequisite to conducting live reef
fishing activities. Banning the targeting of spawning aggregations does not fully guarantee
protection of grouper stocks from overfishing. Too many fish might still be caught outside the
spawning season. However, it is generally agreed by biologists, that protecting spawning
aggregations is both the simplest and the most effective means of reducing the likelihood of
overfishing (e.g. Sadovy, 1994; Johannes et al. l999). Integration of live fishing activities with
the export of chilled fish, most likely to the Honiara market, is also recommended as a means
of adding value to the live fishery as there is often substantial bycatch that could be marketed.
The viability of airfreighting must be considered to reduce the substantial post harvest losses.
So long as there is biological sustainability for a LRFFT in the three regions studied, the
fishery is one that is potentially beneficial to villagers and as an important source of income.
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9.2 Formulation of a Plan of Management
The FAO Technical Guidelines for Responsible Fisheries (1997) defines a fisheries
management plan as:
“…a formal or informal arrangement between a fisheries management authority
and interested parties, which identifies the partners in the fishery and their
respective roles, details the agreed objectives for the fishery, and specifies the
management rules and regulations which apply to it and provides other details
about the fishery which are relevant to the task of the management authority.”
Components for a draft management plan for the LRFFT in Solomon Islands were discussed
at a management workshop in Honiara in November 2001. The management prescriptions that
follow were agreed upon by representatives from the Solomon Islands government, customary
resource owners from the three regions that hosted the LRFFT, companies that run LRFFT
operations, non-governmental organisations, the Forum Fisheries Agency and researchers
representing the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research, who funded the
research that led to the management plan.
A landmark, unanimous agreement arising from the management workshop was that the
spawning aggregations of Plectropomus areolatus, Epinephelus fuscoguttatus and E.
polyphekadion, which overlap in time and space, would be totally protected. Considering the
LRFFT fishery focuses heavily on targeting spawning aggregations, the decision was
remarkable. Protection would be ensured through a total ban on all fishing at those sites
identified by traditional resource owners as spawning aggregation sites for the three target
species. It was agreed that the fishing ban would be for a 10 day period over the new moon,
for three consecutive new moons each year, to coincide with the likely spawning aggregation
times of the three species. Sites and spawning aggregation times would be determined by
resource owners and fishers in conjunction with Fisheries Division officers.
9.3 Management Strategies
In light of the results of the socioeconomic survey carried out in the three regions of Solomon
Islands, management prescriptions were devised to reflect the opportunities and threats
identified. Whilst some variation in responses arose from the study, both between regions and
within each region, the strategies are aimed to encompass all three regions and to manage the
fishery as opposed to shutting it down.
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Threats identified from the operation of the fishery include:
• Pulse fishing that drew men away from families and village duties in a series of shock
events.
• Intensive targeting of aggregations of spawning fish has serious consequences for
recruitment to the fishery and ecosystem
• LRFFT operators would not purchase by-product species
• Prices paid to fishers did not reflect the value of the catch
• Financial return to villagers and village communities did not warrant the harmful social
and biological affects of the fishery
• The government Fisheries Division was unaware that the fishery was in operation and
could not play a constructive role in its management and enforcement.
Opportunities identified through the study for incorporation in the management prescriptions
included:
• Endorse the customary resource owner the key decision maker in the manner that has
historically been the case.
• Engender support for spatial and temporal closures during the period and location of
fish spawning aggregations
• Ensure that LRFFT operators purchased by-product species for the chilled fishery
• Enable fishers to earn a steady income from fishing throughout the year that
supplemented existing means, including marketing garden produce and arts and crafts
• Ensure that legal documentation exists between LRFFT operators and customary
resource owners that includes the government Fisheries Division
• Ensure Fisheries Officers have the capacity to monitor the status of fish spawning
aggregations
The two main conservation management strategies used to regulate participation in the live
reef food-fish trade under this Plan are license limitations and area restrictions. The license
issue procedure places the customary resource owner as the pivotal decision-maker in the
issue of licenses to export live fish from Solomon Islands. There are general license
conditions imposed on all licensees. Additional conditions imposed on prospective licensees
are subject to negotiations with traditional resource owners during conclusion of a Reef
Owner Agreement.
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One overriding condition is that of mandatory closure of spawning aggregation sites for the
key target species. All recognized grouper spawning aggregation sites will be closed to all
fishing for specified periods based on spawning times/seasons. Based on knowledge acquired
from local fishers, the spawning aggregation sites should be declared off-limits to all fishing
for a specified period. Those periods coincide with the occurrence of the new moon during the
months in which spawning aggregations occur, for a period of five days prior to and five days
immediately following the day of the new moon (ie. ten days closure). These closures should
occur for three successive months of each year, those months corresponding to the periods of
peak spawning activity in each area of custom ownership subject to a Reef Owner Agreement
where the fishery is in operation.
The total number of licenses issued nationally should be limited to two (2) as a precautionary
measure, for a period of three years. However, the Director of Fisheries should determine the
number of licenses that may be issued. The Director of Fisheries may review the resulting
whole number of licenses, if necessary, taking into account factors such as changed catch
levels, environmental variations, scientific advice, and changes in the efficiency of fishing
vessels.
9.4 Incorporating International Standards for the LRFFT
Successful management programs are generally based on agreed-upon standards developed
through collaborative processes involving every interest concerned. This includes
participation and representation by as many stakeholder groups as possible. Special attention
is also devoted to groups which are often excluded from decision-making processes (Civic
Exchange, 2001).
US based Non Governmental Organisation, The Nature Conservancy in collaboration with the
Marine Aquarium Council developed a model for best practice standards for the international
LRFFT (Muldoon & Scott, 2004). Such standards were developed inclusive of stakeholders
along the marketing chain from fishers to restaurateurs and included the following key
components.
• assessment and monitoring of fish stocks;
• management, monitoring and enforcement priorities to regulate effort and catch;
• capture/culture, handling, husbandry and transport of wild-caught or mariculture stocks
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Upon completion of the international standards, TNC & MAC (2007) included the following
as key inclusions in management arrangements.
9.4.1 Destructive fishing
Destructive methods of fishing shall not be used within the fishery.
9.4.2 Target stock
Fishing operations shall:
• not target spawning aggregations or fish on known aggregation sites;
• not target or retain immature fish;
• not take threatened or endangered species; and
• minimize by-catch.
9.4.3 Food safety
Fishing operations shall take steps to minimize the risk of supplying ciguatoxic fish by
avoiding:
• Known ciguatoxic areas, and
• Species during known seasonal high levels of susceptibility.
9.4.4 Transshipment
Transshipment of live reef food fish shall take place at a designated hub unless a state
authorised agent monitors the activity in accordance with relevant regulations.
9.5 Process of License Issue
The Solomon Islands government must initiate a call for expressions of interest for
prospective LRFFT operations. All foreign LRFFT operators wishing to establish in Solomon
Islands must first undergo a screening process by the Foreign Investment Board (FIB). Once
the FIB analyses and approves the proposal, the operator must then enter negotiations with the
customary rights holders in the area in which they wish to commence operations in order to
establish a Reef Owner Agreement. Negotiation must include presentation of an operational
plan outlining the prices offered for live fish, village royalty arrangements, net cage
placement, duration of the operation, and any employment and training arrangements. Once
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the resources owners are happy with the operational plan, the two parties must sign the
agreement in the presence of a representative from the Fisheries Division.
This agreement is then presented to the Provincial Government who will assess an application
for a Provincial Business License, which will allow the operator to conduct business in the
Province. In order to export the live product, however, the operator must obtain a Fish
Processing Establishment License from the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources. This
will enable them to export the live product, either by sea or air.
9.6 Precautionary Approaches to Fisheries Management
Consistent with regional and international management principles, precautionary approaches of
management shall apply to this management plan in accordance with the following provisions:
(a) In the absence of adequate scientific data, the Fisheries Division shall take into account
any uncertainties with respect to the size and productivity of the stock, to other
management reference points such as maximum sustainable yield, the level and
distribution of fishing mortality, and the impact of fishing activities on associated and
dependent species, and including environmental and socio-economic conditions.
(b) In managing the live reef fishery, the Fisheries Division shall consider the associated
ecosystems on reefs within Solomon Islands. The Fisheries Division shall develop data
collection and conduct research to assess the impact of fishing on target and non-target
species and their environment, adopt plans as necessary to ensure the conservation of
target and non-target species and consider the protection of habitats of special concern.
(c) The absence of adequate scientific information shall not be used as a reason for postponing
or failing to take measures to protect the target and non-target species in Solomon Islands.
(d) The precautionary approach shall be based on the best scientific information available,
include all appropriate techniques and be aimed at setting stock specific minimum
standards for conservation and management.
9.7 Management and Development Strategies
The following management strategies are adopted for the fishery in pursuit of the objectives;
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9.7.1 Control of Fishing Effort
(a) Implement limits on fishing effort for each area of operation at a sustainable level. This
would be achieved by conducting seasonal closures during the spawning period of the
three main species in each area delineated by a Reef Owner Agreement.
9.7.2 Reef Owner Agreements
(a) Develop and implement Reef Owner Agreements that will enable villagers to participate
in the formulation and implementation of a plan for the fishery within traditional clan
estates and ensure that resource owners maximise return from the fishery without
jeopardising their livelihood.
(b) The Reef Owner Agreements should be consistent and in harmony with the plan,
fisheries policies on sustainable development and resources management, and
development aspirations of the provincial and local level governments.
9.7.3 Monitoring and Compliance
(a) Obtain and validate scientific data using logbooks and scientific observers on live reef
fish operations.
(b) Monitor the impact of the LRFFT on non-target, dependent or associated species and,
where necessary, adopt measures to maximise returns from these species;
(c) Monitor the impact of live reef fishing on the ecosystem and implement measures to
address any adverse impacts;
(d) Monitor the economic performance of the live reef fishery, including information on
catches, sales, processing and other relevant information from both the catching and
processing sectors.
9.8 Management Measures
9.8.1 Reef Owner Agreements
(i) There shall be area-specific Reef Owner Agreements on all the areas open to
commercial fishing for the Live Reef Food Fish Trade.
(ii) The maximum area to which a Reef Owner Agreement shall apply shall be the
boundaries to customary estates.
(iii) Licenses to fish and undertake buying and export operations in the Live Reef Food
Fish Trade shall only be issued for areas with approved Reef Owner Agreements.
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Conditions Applied to Reef Owner Agreements:
1. Prospective LRFFT operators must give thirty days notice to traditional resource
owners that they wish to enter into negotiations for a Reef Owner Agreement;
2. Applicant must present a detailed operational plan to the resource owners (see below);
3. Agreement must meet comprehensive criteria, consistent with such agreements
throughout Solomon Islands. This includes the purchase and purchase price of non-
target species. Additional terms may be met subject to negotiation;
4. Any terms of the agreement must not conflict with national or provincial laws or
policies and must be endorsed in the presence of an authorised Fisheries Licensing
Officer(s);
5. A security bond must be paid by the prospective licensee to ensure payment of
royalties and other commitments negotiated as part of the Reef Owner Agreement;
6. All fishing activity is to be carried out by village fishers. No fishing at all is to be
carried out by the crew of the operator’s vessel;
7. Identification and documentation of spawning aggregation sites within the area subject
to the Reef Owner Agreement must be completed. These areas will then be subject to
mandatory closure for five days prior to the new moon and for five days after the new
moon during the three months of peak spawning activity in that area. This closure
applies to all fishing and all species for three monthly periods of ten days; and
8. Will be enforced by the village communities, Provincial Government and Fisheries
Officers empowered under the Fisheries Act 1998.
Applicants Operational Plan
Applicants are obliged to present a plan outlining all the details of the proposed LRFFT
operation to resource owners when negotiating a Reef Owner Agreement. The plan should
include:
1. A detailed description of the proposed operation;
2. Ownership, control and management of the operation/company;
3. Target species;
4. Method by which fishers would be hired, used and paid;
5. Fishing methods, equipment and treatments to be used;
6. Infrastructure (existing and proposed);
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7. Human resource requirements, noting clearly where foreigners or non-citizens would
be required, what they would be doing and for how long;
8. A detailed plan of the training components, stating clearly where locals would be
trained, what training they would get, and reasons;
9. Fish storage, processing and transportation mechanisms;
10. The proposed market; and
11. An operational budget.
9.8.2 Licensing
(i) Licenses shall be endorsed to operate within the area defined by the Reef Owner
Agreement.
(ii) Licenses shall be issued for a maximum period of one year and shall be renewed only
after it has been reviewed.
(iii) The licensee and the resource owners in the licensed area shall resolve customary
tenure, use rights and compensation issues in the licensed area before the license is
issued.
(iv) Where foreign vessels are used in joint venture operations, the foreign crew numbers
shall be limited to the minimum required to operate the vessel and maintain the fish.
(v) Vessels shall be limited to transporting fish only and shall not be conducting direct
fishing operations. All live fish shall be purchased from artisanal fishers.
(vi) Vessels licensed to carry live fish shall have facilities for storing iced/chilled fish and
to purchase any commercially acceptable by-catch for sale in urban centres.
(vii) Fish shall not be delivered or transhipped to another vessel without prior written
permission and inspection of the products by a Fisheries Officer.
(viii) The licensee shall permit a Fisheries Officer to board the vessel and shall provide
accommodation free of charge at any time while the vessel is operating under the
license.
(ix) Licensee must not purchase live fish during the period of mandatory closure of
spawning aggregation sites;
(x) Live fish exports shall only be permitted from designated ports.
9.8.3 Species Restrictions
(i) If there is evidence that certain targeted live reef fish species are being over-exploited,
Reef Owner Agreements may restrict such species from being taken from the wild and
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exported.
(ii) Purchase of Maori or Humphead Wrasse (Cheilinus undulatus) shall be prohibited.
9.8.4 Closed Season
(i) Closure of all grouper spawning aggregation sites to all fishing for specified periods
based on spawning times/seasons. Based on knowledge acquired from local fishers,
the spawning aggregation sites should be declared off-limits to all fishing for a
specified period. Those periods coincide with the occurrence of the new moon during
the months in which spawning aggregations occur, for a period of five days prior to
and five days immediately following the day of the new moon (i.e. ten days closure).
These closures should occur for three successive months of each year, those months
corresponding to the periods of peak spawning activity in each area of custom
ownership subject to a Reef Owner Agreement where the fishery is in operation.
9.8.5 Closed Area
(i) Closed areas shall be enforced where areas are identified with significant biological or
traditional importance. An area may be closed permanently or for a specified period.
(ii) Areas in which any of the targeted species of fish aggregate to spawn shall be closed
during the duration of the spawning period in accordance with (d)(i).
9.8.6 Gear Restrictions
(i) The method of fishing should be restricted to hook-and-line.
(ii) Hookah gear shall not be used in any live reef fishing operations.
(iii) The use, storage and transportation of scuba or hookah equipment shall not be
permitted on any licensed fish carrier and related fishing vessels.
(iv) The use, storage and transportation of any explosives, noxious substances (including
sodium cyanide) for the purpose of killing, stunning, disabling or taking fish or in any
way rendering fish to be more easily taken, shall not be permitted on any licensed
vessel.
9.8.7 Foreign Vessel Requirements
(i) All foreign vessels must be on “good standing” on the Regional Register of Foreign
Fishing Vessels in accordance with the Fisheries (Foreign Fishing Vessels)
(Amendment) Regulations 1983;
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(ii) Valid safety certificate required (issued under s64 of the Shipping Act 1998);
(iii) Appropriate vessel marking;
(iv) License to be carried on board the vessel;
(v) Vessel operator (and crew) must comply with all the relevant legislation of Solomon
Islands, including the Plan, any special conditions of the license subject to a Reef
Owner Agreement, including payment of any relevant fees and charges in accordance
with customary rights when fishing in those areas;
(vi) Gear stowage while navigating through waters not covered by the license; and
(vii) No transportation, landing or receiving illegally caught fish;
9.8.8 Responsible Fishing Practises
(i) The vessel, its owners, operators and crew shall ensure the protection of coral reefs
from damage or degradation at all times during the vessel's fishing operations.
Destroying or damaging coral reefs, either directly or indirectly, deliberately or
through negligence shall result in prosecution or suspension of the license.
9.8.9 By-catch
(i) Precautionary measures shall be taken by the licensed operators to minimise the by-catch
in the course of fishing. Where the by-catch is of commercial value every effort will be
made to sell the catch at the local markets.
9.8.10 Training
(i) Licensee must collaborate with Fisheries Division to conduct training and awareness
in local communities, subject to Reef Owner Agreement, regarding best-practice in
live fish handling, storage and transportation to minimise post harvest losses. Licensee
to fund the training;
9.8.11 Restrictions of Fishers
(i) Foreigners or non-citizens shall not be involved in the actual capturing of live reef
fish.
9.9 Monitoring
(a) Licensees shall ensure that detailed daily records, pertaining to catches and purchases,
182
are maintained in a compulsory logbook. These records shall be submitted to the
Fisheries Division on a monthly basis and should include:
Individual entry
(i) Date;
(ii) Fisher’s village;
(iii) Species of each specimen caught;
(iv) Location of each specimen caught;
(v) Time that each specimen was caught;
(vi) Weight of each specimen caught;
(vii) Price paid to the fisher;
Summary data
(viii) Number of each species caught;
(ix) Number of deaths of each species caught i.e. mortality rate;
(x) When fish are kept in cages i.e. time in;
(xi) When fish are exported i.e. time out;
(xii) Sale price received;
(xiii) Export records, including copies of the shipment manifests and invoices; and
(xiv) Any other data or information required by Fisheries Division for management
purposes.
(b) Information derived from logbooks will be utilised by Fisheries Officers for the
purpose of monitoring stock abundance and the impact on spawning stock as part of
an ongoing program that will monitor spawning aggregations (see part (c)).
(c) Licensees must carry observers, on request by the government, for scientific,
compliance, monitoring or other functions, and cover specified costs associated with
observer coverage;
(d) Officers from the Fisheries Division will monitor spawning aggregations using
Underwater Visual Census. Data collected in this way will form the basis of technical
advice that Fisheries Division is able to offer traditional resource owners with regard
to the status of spawning stock. It will also contribute to a comprehensive database
that will aid future research.
183
9.10 Amendments
(a) The Fisheries Division shall keep this plan under review as new information is
obtained to meet the objectives of this plan.
(b) Any amendments to this plan shall be endorsed by the Director, submitted to the
Minister for approval and notified in the National Gazette.
184
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Appendix 1: Village Household Questionnaire
/ /2000 Village � ML 1 RL 2 OJ 3
Male 1 Female 2 Age � Fished in LRFFT? � YES 1 NO 2 Religion � SDA 1 UC 2 CFC 3 Ang 4 COC 5
Pajara Spawning Season in Marovo Lagoon Huhua Spawning Season in Ontong Java Pajara Spawning Season in Roviana Lagoon
February, March, April June, July, August October, November, December
Section 1: Activities of Your Household in 1999 Would you estimate how much time you spend on various tasks?
Activities of a MAN in your household in 1999 Activities of a WOMAN in your household in 1999
Activity Hours/Day Days/Week Codes Hours/Day Days/Week Codes
LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999 LRFFT 1999
Gardening and Farming m_gard1 m_gard2 f_gard1 f_gard2
Collecting Firewood m_fire1 m_fire2 f_fire1 f_fire2
House repairs/ maintenance m_rep1 m_rep2 f_rep1 f_rep2
Mat Weaving/Rope Making m_weav1 m_weav2 f_weav1 f_weav2
Art and craft m_art1 m_art2 f_art1 f_art2
Cooking m_cook1 m_cook2 f_cook1 f_cook2
Copra making m_copra1 m_copra2 f_copra1 f_copra2
Household chores in general m_chore1 m_chore2 f_chore1 f_chore2
Teaching children m_teach1 m_teach2 f_teach1 f_teach2
Church involvement m_churc1 m_churc2 f_churc1 f_churc2
Section 2: Fishing Effort in 1999 How many members of your household went fishing for....
Fishery During the Pajara/Huhua Season in 1999 Out of the Pajara/Huhua Season in 1999 Live Reef Food Fish Trade
Household mfish_h1 mfish_h2 mfish_lf
No. trips per week in 1999? No. hours per trip in 1999? LRFFT Fishery
Household In Season Out of Season In Season Out of Season No. trips per week? No. hours per trip?
tfish_h1 tfish_h2 htrip_h1 htrip_h2 tfish_lf htrip_lf
Section 3: Pajara/Huhua Catch for 1999 What is the average number of fish that you catch per fishing trip, at the following times?
During the Pajara/Huhua Season in 1999 Out of the Pajara/Huhua Season in 1999 Live Reef Food Fish Trade
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Fishery Total No. of Fish No. Pajara/Huhua Total No. of Fish No. Pajara/Huhua Total No. of Fish No. Pajara/Huhua
Household ctrip_h1 ptrip_h1 ctrip_h2 ptrip_h2 ctrip_lf ptrip_lf
How much should you get paid for live fish? → $/kg copayfis How much should the village get paid for live fish? → $/kg copayvil
Section 4. Patterns of Fish Consumption How often do you eat these fish?
0 Never 1 Everyday 2 4 or 5 times a week 3 2 or 3 times per week 4 Once per week
During the Pajara/Huhua Season in 1999 Out of the Pajara/Huhua Season in 1999
Plectropomus areolatus p.areol1 p.areol2
Epinephelus fuscoguttatus e.fusco1 e.fusco2
Epinephelus polyphekadion e.polyp1 e.polyp2
Plectropomus leopardus p.leopa1 p.leopa2
Plectropomus oligacanthus p.oligo1 p.oligo2
Variola louti v.louti1 v.louti2
Cheilinus undulatus c.undul1 c.undul2
Cromileptes altivelis c.altiv1 c.altiv2
Section 5: Income and Expenditure in 1999
INCOME in 1999 EXPENDITURE in 1999
Income Source How much How often Code Expense How much How often Code
Sale of Fish in Eskies to Honiara y_fish_e School fees x_schfee
Sale of Beche-de-mer y_bdm School contributions x_schcon
Sale of Trochus y_troch Other school expenses e.g. pocket money x_schoth
Sale of Copra y_copra Church offerings x_church
Farming (e.g. vegetables, animals etc) y_farm Marriage contributions x_marria
Art and Craft y_art Petrol x_petrol
Wage Employment y_wages Kerosene x_kero
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Own Business (profit only) y_busine Rice x_rice
Relative working elsewhere y_relati All other food e.g. flour, sugar, Taiyo x_food
Other y_other1 Clothing x_clothe
Other y_other2 Medical needs x_medica
Other y_other3 Fishing gear x_f.gear
Other y_other4 Tobacco x_tobacc
Other y_other5 Carving expenses x_carvin
Other y_other6 Other household needs e.g. lantern, etc x_house
Other y_other7 Gardening inputs e.g. tools, seed etc x_garden
Live Reef Food Fish Trade y_lrfft Live Reef Food Fish Trade x_lrfft
Section 6: Perceptions of Importance
1 2 3 4 5
Not important at all Not very important I don’t know Reasonably important Important
How important are the spawning aggregations to having pajara/huhua in the future? i_spagg
How important is fishing in the passages during pajara/huhua spawning season in order to feed your family? i_pasfoo
How important is fishing in the passages during pajara/huhua spawning season in order to make money? i_pasmon
How important is not fishing in the passages during pajara/huhua spawning season so there are plenty of pajara/huhua throughout the year? i_pasnof
How important is having protected areas where no fishing is allowed? i_protec
How important is customary rights regarding ownership of the nearshore area and the reefs? i_custom
How important is respecting these customary rights? i_rescus
How important is the law that temporarily bans the export of live pajara/huhua? i_morato
How important is reopening the export of live pajara/huhua? i_liftmo
How important is adopting modern fisheries management at the expense of traditional fisheries management? i_modman
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Appendix 2: Pilot Survey Notes
Interview 1 at Luaniua, OJ: George
About Your Household
Number permanently living in household – Problem with children at boarding school. They
are only home on holidays so the number of members of the household was taken as being
exclusive of children at boarding school.
Composition of Household – Family may live in numerous households. Provision is for
family and not necessarily for the household.
Household Sources of Income – It is only recently in Ontong Java that there has been
management controls applied by the village Chiefs regarding diving for Trochus and beche-
de-mer. The seasons now run alternately rather than concurrently. Diving for beche-de-mer is
permissible from 15th November to 15th December in order for folk to pay annual school fees.
Household Members Role in the Community – Most of the services and the provision of
goods and food is conducted on a family by family basis with the inclusion of friends and
neighbours. Building of huts, gardening, fishing etc is conducted on this basis.
Number of Meals per Week – Fresh fish is often shared among family and friends of different
households.
Fishing Effort
Number of Trips per Week – There is very little collecting of marine invertebrates. Cannot be
counted in whole numbers on a weekly basis.
Household and Community Benefits
Difficult to discern or to quantify in Ontong Java as the fishery has only operated for one
season and that was a couple of years ago.
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Management
All fishing areas are open to everyone with the exception of beche-de-mer and Trochus.
Fishing for Trochus is requires permission of the Chiefs. Beche-de-mer is open to all except
during closed seasons.
Customary Marine Tenure could be seen to be eroding in isolated pockets but there is still a
lot of respect for the Chief’s directives regarding CMT. The Polynesian system is different in
that the Chiefs have control over all marine resources and access is open to all people of e.g.
Luaniua, as opposed to the Melanesian way of small areas of tenure where the land extends to
the sea and there are many lines of demarcation which carries the potential for conflict
between neighbouring resource owners.
Chief Peter wants court orders given to people who do not respect the CMT system in Ontong
Java.
Knowledge of the Market Chain
George catches fish and sells them to the buyer. After that, he doesn’t know what happens.
Interview 2 at Luaniua, OJ: Walter
About Your Household
Household Sources of Income – Walter worked as an employer for the fish buyers for six
months. He recruited fishers into the fishery. He was encouraged to fish but any fish he
caught, he was not paid additional to his salary.
Number of Meals per Week – The household might eat chicken once per month.
Fishing Assets – He has nets of varying sizes. Small nets are used for catching baitfish.
Walter owned the first fibreglass canoe in the village in 1976. He still uses it with no
problems.
Types of Fish You Catch – Walter catches completely different species for the household than
he does for the LRFFT. Only sometimes does he catch LRFFT species.
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Live Reef Food-Fish Trade
Changes to Roles of Household Members – When Walter is fishing in the LRFFT, he is
making money but returns to the household with no food because it is he who should be
providing for them.
Motivation
Why did you join the LRFFT – Walter joined the company to act as a spy for the Chiefs of the
village.
Management
Important Characteristics of the Target Species – Walter can’t tell the males from the females.
When the fish aggregate, he knows that it is to lay eggs, but fish without eggs were assumed
to be females that are either unable to lay eggs or have already laid them. He is unaware of
males being present. He thought that they were all females.
Customary Marine Tenure – Open access to everyone including fishers from outside such as
Pelau as long as a relative accompanies them from Luaniua. A fisher from Pelau wouldn’t fish
in Luaniua waters because he would feel bad about it. It goes for Luaniua fishers in waters of
Pelau or elsewhere too.
Interview 1 at Pelau, OJ: Chris
About Your Household
Number of meals per Week – Question mark over the relevance of knowing anything else but
the consumption of fish. Perhaps differentiate fresh fish from canned fish. Include food
gathered from the reef. Fresh fish is always caught and tinned fish is, obviously, always
bought.
Fishing Effort
Problem here is that fishermen concentrate on one fishery at a time. In Ontong Java, the
Trochus and beche-de-mer fisheries alternate year by year (open/closed). The Live Reef
Fishery may run all year with fish being penned until the official season begins when the
buyer arrives. The LRFFT hasn’t operated since 1997 so it is difficult to know the period for
which we are surveying. The LRFFT in Ontong Java has only operated for one season.
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Types of Fish You Catch – In Pelau, the species targeted are still plentiful so some of the
same will be caught for the household. However, when they fish for the household, they fish
in the nearshore lagoon so the species caught are often different. Give some consideration to
changing this question with regard to simplifying.
Income
Average Monthly Income – Sale of live fish is problematic as a cross check because the fish
sold to the company have been caught throughout the year but the peak period is between mid
June and mid July when the target species aggregate to spawn.
Motivation
Community Benefits – Difficult to discern and quantify after only one season. Also, there is
animosity against the company since the company didn’t pay royalties to the village so the
Chief confiscated all their gear. It is worth considering, however that more money in the
fishers pockets means more improvement to things like the village church, outboard motors
on boats and generally a better quality of life for people in the village.
Interview 1 at Pelau, OJ: Edmond
Household Sources of Income
Edmond goes hard for the LRFFT all year round. He sells the fish when the company arrives
but fishes all year round for live fish because Trochus and beche-de-mer have been closed.
How many fish do you catch – Edmond catches around thirty fish weighing about 15kg and
shares the catch with family and friends. I expect that the size of the subsistence catch for the
household, or even the village, could be difficult to quantify because whilst a fisher may share
his subsistence catch, he could also be the benefactor of other fisher’s subsistence catch.
LRFFT
Edmond stays away on another island during the week to go fishing and returns on weekends
to see his family.
He doesn’t fish in deep water because the swim bladder expands at the surface and the fish
dies.
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There is a lot of bycatch. White fish fetch $1.20 from the company who uses it to feed the fish
in the holding pens. A very large amount of bycatch is, however, thrown away dead.
Fishing Effort
Hand line, drop line and towline are all pretty well the same thing. Better to ask the breaking
strain or “test” of the line.
Interview 3 at Vacambo, ML: Virginia
The first woman to be interviewed, as there are no women fishing in Ontong Java but it is
common in Marovo Lagoon.
In Marovo Lagoon, the influence of the Seventh day Adventist church is very pronounced.
More than half of the population belongs to this faith. Some fishers sell their fish to local
buyers from the SDA who sell the fish on to people living elsewhere.
Fish on ice to Honiara depends on the availability of eskies and these are delivered from
Honiara buyers only sporadically through the year at very unpredictable times. Unable to get
weekly fishing effort as the eskies are available for only short periods of time.
Fishing for the LRFFT involves two trips per day, 6 days per week, while the company is
around. She fishes from 5am to 10am and from 3pm to 6pm.
Catch
A difficult and complicated question that is fraught with the potential for inaccuracy. Species
identification appears to be OK with aid of the book but number and weight can be sketchy
given the LRFFT hasn’t operated for a while, fish on ice to Honiara fishery is very sporadic,
and the relative unimportance of this information to the people in general.
Think about combining the catch for the Fishery Centre with that of fish on ice to Honiara, as
the fishery is essentially the same. The only difference appears to be the buyer. It may take the
tedium, which the respondent clearly finds tiring as there is often a lot of memory wracking
involved.
In Marovo Lagoon, fishing for the household may involve a variety of species overall, but
mostly one or two species only i.e. marogo and karupata and often the whole catch will be
marogo only. There is geographical variation within the lagoon and as fishing is done from a
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paddle canoe, the range of habitats in proximity to the village is very important in regard to
the species that is caught for all fisheries except the LRFFT.
Consider using the information on species caught to make a list (Latin binomial and page
number from the book) and seeking to quantify each with average number and average weight
of the catch. This will speed the process up, eliminate translation of local names and the
photos will jog people’s memories. Include scope for “Others” that will, inevitably, be built
whilst panning through the pages. Also, include a time dimension. For example, av. no. and
av. wt (kg) per fishing day.
Virginia noted that during the spawning period, the fish are larger than the period before and
after, indicating that the bigger fish (possibly males) move into the area for the spawning then
move on.
Virginia’s catch hasn’t changed over the four years of her involvement in the LRFFT. During
the spawning aggregations, the full moon brings many fish, but no moon has the opposite
effect.
Habitats question – Consider dropping the months of the year as the answers appear to
indicate that the fish are available all year round. The pulse fish is during spawning but this
question is asked later in the questionnaire. Also, experiment with nominating the species
(and page number) and getting them to name the habitat. That will draw out local knowledge
of where to find each species. In this case the time factor may prove useful.
Why fish gather – Virginia noted that during spawning aggregation, the fish are exceptionally
hungry by the voracious way they attack the bait. She also noted that all the fish they catch at
this time are females as they all have eggs. Based on this, she believes that all the fish are
females bearing young.
Gathering Behaviour table – The spawning period could begin as early as December with
numbers building up in November. Spawning sites are not restricted to passages in Marovo
Lagoon.
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General Survey Structure Observations
• Number of trips per week – Need to break this box into two boxes. One to ascertain
the times of year that each fishery is fished and another that records the trips per week
and average duration.
• Restructure the first part to link catch with effort i.e. the type of gear used and craft for
each fishery and when, for one section; and number of trips per week and duration of
each trip in another.
• Diet – What do you eat during times of stormy weather when you don’t go fishing?
Would you describe the roles of the males in providing for the household?
(Prompt: Ask whether men are involved in gardening, cooking and collecting off the reef for
subsistence)
• Carving, fishing, building and repairing the house, gardening, firewood cutting. Joint
decision making between husband and wife. Teaches children on the trade of making
carvings and fishing.
• Gardening, firewood cutting, fishing, art and craft, and repair and building of the
house. Discusses with his wife for decision making and teaches the children traditional
knowledge.
• Gardening, fishing, carving, house repair and building. He makes decisions for the
household and the wife shares this. He teaches traditional knowledge to the children.
• Fishing, bread winner, gardening, house building, and carving. Decisions are made
together with the wife and other adults. Teaches children on traditional knowledge and
church beliefs.
• Fishing, gardening, house repairing, collecting of firewood, diving for beche-de-mer
and Trochus. He makes the decisions for the household. The man makes decisions for
the boys (sons) and educates them on traditional knowledge.
• Fishing, gardening, poultry, cooking, house building. He dives for beche-de-mer and
Trochus and shares the decision making with his wife.
• Fishing, house building, diving for beche-de-mer and Trochus, gardening and cutting
firewood. He makes the decisions on the whole. However, he shares with his wife on
plans for the upcoming activities e.g. building houses or planning a long diving trip.
He teaches his children all the tricks of their traditions.
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• Fishing, diving, collecting firewood, house making and repairing. Man and wife make
collective decisions together in the household.
• Fishing, cut firewood, gardening, house building, diving for beche-de-mer and
Trochus. The father makes the decisions in the house.
• Fishing, building, gardening, cutting firewood, diving for beche-de-mer and fish. He
makes decisions together with his wife. He teaches the children on traditional
knowledge and safety.
How would you describe the roles of the females in providing for the household?
(Prompt: Ask whether women and children are involved in fishing, copra plantation work and
household decision making)
• Household chores, weaves baskets for sale, gardening and fishing. Teaches children
traditional knowledge.
• Gardening, weaving, and preparing food for the family. She also helps in decision
making and teaching children.
• Sewing of leaves for building houses, cooking, gardening and teaches the children on
mat weaving and other household chores.
• Cooking, gardening, household chores, mat weaving and tending to the children. They
teach children on traditional knowledge. Decision making is shared with the
household.
• The mother teaches her daughter on traditional knowledge and women’s chores.
Sometimes the wife makes decisions for the family when the need arises but consults
the husband when she needs support. Women and children support each other in copra
making but mostly the men do the fishing.
• The wife does decision making with the husband but the whole household shares
work.
• Food preparation, making mats, gardening and teaching the children on cleanliness
and household chores. The wife helps at times with the decision making.
• Gardening, mat making, collecting of firewood, general household chores and helps
the husband to make decisions. She teaches children on household activities and
traditional knowledge.
• Gardening, making mats, making ropes, preparing food, collecting water. Mothers
teach traditional knowledge to daughters.
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• Help through family chores, gardening, poultry keeping, cooking and feeding the
animals such as pigs etc. Has a roster for the family to follow. Wife teachers daughters
to make ropes for building, gardening and mat making. She also shares with the
husband on decision making.
Would you explain the roles that members of your household play within the village
community?
(e.g. involvement in any official capacity such as village council or the church, even sport and
interest groups)
• Do not really play major roles in the village community
• Kindergarten teacher in the village
• He is village spokesman for the chief. He gives out the Chief’s news to the Chea
community. He acts as a security officer for the Chief in times of conflict.
• The husband is a church leader who helps the church pastor.
• Wife is a member of the Chiefs family and can make decisions with the Chief on land
or island matters.
• Walter is a member of the Council of Chiefs, a church layman and a member of the
church parish committee. His daughter is a leader of the mothers union of the village.
Another daughter, who is single, is a member of the health committee.
• Formerly a member of the Council of chiefs but resigned due to some personal
disagreements. Wife is a member of the Anglican mothers union.
• Member of the Pelau Council of Chiefs, and John is a choir master of the Anglican
church. John’s wife is a member of the Anglican church sisters association.
• Member of the school committee.
• Chairman of the Anglican church of Luaniua. Wife is a member of the Anglican
Companion and the two daughters are members of the St Francis Companion. He is
also a member of the Luaniua Council of Chiefs.
If the fish are getting smaller and harder to catch (i.e. If this is the answer), how do you
feel about that with regard to the future of earning a living from catching live fish?
• She says that the catch is the same in the four years she fished.
• He does not know the difference.
• There will be no more LRFFT stocks left to catch.
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• The fish are still easy to catch but the size has decreased. He thinks that it looks like,
in the near future, the fish stocks will disappear and there is already an indication of
low catches.
Could you describe the changes to the roles of members of your household since the
LRFFT began in your village?
(Prompt: Is there less time spent tending to the garden, cooking, collecting food from the reef
or doing household chores?)
• It didn’t disturb activities but had an advantage in that she was able to buy food and
meet the needs of her family.
• It did not disturb household activities.
• LRFFT did disturb household activities, fishermen especially ignored gardening.
• People became hungry as a result of spending more time fishing. The gardens were
especially not supplying the usual needs of the household. A three month stop to
gardening is too long.
• The household is not affected much when only the father is the fisherman, but is does
have a bearing when the fishing season prolongs.
• The household was concerned about the father not providing the fish for their meals.
They were going hungry because he was out fishing for the live fish trade.
• Everything seemed OK when I was away fishing. The family was visited during
weekends.
• The household was not affected by the LRFFT.
• No changes to the family activities.
• He thinks that his absence has caused some disturbance to his normal routine. It was
for this reason that he did not continue fishing after a weeks trial.
What would be your reaction to an increase in the price paid to the fishers in the
LRFFT by the buyer? For example, what if you were paid double the current price?
(Prompt: Would you fish for live fish more often or would you be satisfied that your cash
requirements had been met
• She will fish more if the price is doubled.
• He will fish more if the price of fish doubles.
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• He will also double up his catch.
• He thinks that he will fish less time and he is very worried that the fish stocks will be
overfished.
• He will double his fishing time if the price is doubled.
• He has to ask the consent of the family and if they say yes, he will fish eight hours per
day.
• He is going to increase fishing pressure because it will give him more income.
• He will fish more if the price doubled.
• If the price is doubled, he will fish more for more money.
• He would go out and fish more than usual.
Would you list the things in your daily life that require cash?
• (Prompt: what are the household outgoings for food, accommodation, the church,
livestock, community, fishing etc.)
• Food, clothes, church contributions, school fees, school contributions, and household
needs.
• Soap, kerosene, clothes, school fees, church contributions, and household needs.
• Rice, clothes, soup, kerosene, watches, church contributions, school fees, medical
needs, and other household expenses.
• Food, clothes, household needs, school fees, church contributions, youth, men and
women fellowship contributions, church targets in the Uniting Church.
• School fees, rice, four, sugar, kerosene, petrol, smokes, household items, clothing,
church contributions, school contributions, marriage contributions, fishing gear and
other foodstuffs.
• School fees, clothes, kerosene, petrol, smokes, church contributions, rice, flour, sugar,
marriage contributions, fishing gear and household needs.
• School fees, clothes, church contributions and other household needs.
• School fees, food, smokes, kerosene, clothes, church contributions, marriage
contributions and other household necessities.
• Food and clothing, church and school contributions. School fees are also paid. Some
money is also used to purchase fishing gear.
• Food, clothes, church contributions, marriage contributions, kerosene and other
household needs.
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Could you list the costs associated with fishing for live fish?
(Prompt: value of capital and ongoing costs e.g. the cost of the boat, motor, fuel, fishing gear
etc. What items are provided by the companies e.g. lines, hooks, bait etc?
• She bought smaller lines to catch bait for fishing. The company provides hooks, lines
and cage nets.
• No costs. The company provided hooks, lines, gloves and cages to keep the fish alive.
• No costs – The company provided fishing lines, hooks and cages.
• He bought his own fishing gear. The company provides hooks and lines and fish
cages.
• No costs. The company provides hooks, lines and storage nets.
• No costs. The company provides hooks, lines and storage nets.
• No costs. Company provides line and hooks.
• No costs. Company provides fishing hooks and lines, with a small fish cage.
• No costs. The company provides hooks, lines and cages.
• No costs. The company provides hooks, lines and cages
Can you explain why you joined the LRFFT?
(Prompt: Are you interested in accruing wealth and a collection of assets or are you
interested only in providing a living for your household?)
• She joined in order to make money so that she could meet family needs. She is
reluctant to tell us her plans.
• He fished just to get extra income.
• To get money.
• He needs the money to help meet the cost of living the lifestyle that he is accustomed
to.
• Money to earn a better living to help educate my children and meet domestic costs. In
addition, to purchase better fishing gear such as an outboard motor.
• He was asked to join by the two Chiefs to work with the APL company to act as a spy
for the Chiefs.
• He joined in order to have some income to help his family meet the cost of their needs.
• He joined to make money and enjoy other necessities such as buying food and clothes.
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• Wish to make money and the money will be used to meet family needs such as food,
clothes and other domestic needs. There is not enough money to meet all our needs.
• He just wanted to take part and see how it will be when involved and he wanted to
catch other by-catch for his pigs and chickens.
In what way has your household benefited from the LRFFT?
(Prompt: 1. What is the tangible benefits e.g. new roof, out board motor etc; 2. What are the
intangible benefits e.g. better quality of life, financial security, and peace of mind?)
• It has made things easier for the family to purchase things for themselves and the
children.
• He managed to pay two years of his daughter’s school fees.
• No benefits except that his family is able to buy the basic things that they need.
• Food, targets, contributions and transport to medical centres and needy.
• Industry is too new to experience any of these benefits.
• No benefits.
• There was no outstanding benefits recorded but my family was able to pay for basic
needs from the little money we had from the LRFFT.
• He bought a 15hp engine to go with his canoe.
• Too short to experience any benefits. Those that fished longer periods did benefit in
buying outboard motors.
• No benefits at all.
Can you describe the benefits to the community that have occurred as a result of the
LRFFT?
(Prompt: Is there any visible advantage from the LRFFT, such as a new school, church or
other buildings in the village?)
• Helped in building the church and in providing funds to meet church targets.
• No benefits, except all fishermen had personal gains. The royalties and community
benefits were not seen at all.
• No benefits at all. Royalties and rents to the community went not felt at all.
• Met the church village target of SBD$4,000 per year. Two days fishing in a week was
used to meet this target.
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• Fishermen managed to buy assets such as outboard motors after the live fish trade
operations.
• No benefits.
• No benefits were felt in the community. There was some money paid by the company,
in terms of rent and royalties but the Pelau community has not seen this.
• There were no benefits because the company refused to pay a half tonne royalty
(SBD$250) to the village. The Pelau Council of Chiefs have confiscated all assets of
the LRFFT and stored most of it in the village. Six months rental was not paid either.
• No benefits. The company has failed to pay rents and royalties to the community.
• The company did pay the royalties but the community do not know where the money
went and what it was used for.
Can you explain why you fish for live fish at certain places and at certain times of the
year?
(Prompt: Try to get an explanation as to why the fish are ‘gathering’ at these times and
places)
• She thinks most of them are females and they are very hungry.
• They aggregate to lay eggs.
• Spawning fish is known to be producing young at this time.
• It was believed that they came together to eat the eggs of the giant trigger fish. It is
only recently that they know that it is for spawning.
• The fish gather to spawn but we do not know where the eggs are put or laid.
• They know that they gather to spawn but they think that only females gather and they
recognise the females by their eggs.
• He does not know why fish aggregate at certain places and at certain times.
• Firstly, we do not know why the fish are gathering. We only know that it is going to
gather and feed at a certain time of the year i.e. mid June to mid July each year.
• He does not know the LRFFT species have this behaviour.
• He heard from ancestors that these fish gather to spawn. You can see them clearly on
shallow reefs in the passages.
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What is your understanding of the important characteristics of the LRFFT target
species?
(Prompt: 1. Can you tell the males from the females? 2. How often do they reproduce? 3.
How do you identify reproductive behaviour? 4. Do you understand the larval migration
patterns?)
• She does not know the biology and movement of the fish.
• He only knows they are here to spawn but any other biological knowledge is
unknown.
• They bite and chase each other during mating behaviour but he does not know other
biological behaviour.
• He does not really know the biology of the fish although he believes that traditionally,
older people do know grouper’s sex.
• They cannot differentiate males from females, but they recognise the eggs on the
female. They know they come to spawn in May, June and July but they do not know
larval stages or migratory patterns.
• They know that they reproduce three months of the year but they do not know neither
reproductive behaviour, larval stages nor migratory patterns.
• He does not know any of the biological characteristics.
• No biological knowledge but we know the fish from history.
• He does not understand about the LRFFT species but goes along with other fishermen
to fish when it is spawning season.
• He has no idea about the biology and does not know it’s migratory patterns. Octopus
fish usually comes ashore near the reefs during the spawning season because it is
afraid of the spawning fish.
Can you explain what happens to the fish that you catch that are not wanted for selling?
(Prompt: How much bycatch is there and can they think of a better use for it than just
throwing it away?)
• There is no problem with bycatch. It is eaten and sold locally.
• The bycatch is eaten and it did not create any problems.
• By-catch is not a problem. They eat it at home.
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• Sometimes there is too much of the by-catch and we usually give it to neighbours as a
gift.
How are the areas that you fish subjected to customary systems that manage fishing?
(Prompt: Is the management aimed at fishers catching live fish from spawning aggregations?)
• It is open access and all the people fish together happily. Companies must first
negotiate with the Chief before it can operate.
• It is open access to all Marovo people.
• Reef owners or tribes have full ownership.
• Fishing is open access but there is a problem when some are using fishing lines and
others are diving with spear guns.
• Open access to everyone.
• Open access.
• Open access to everyone.
• Open access, no management.
• Open access to everyone.
• Open access to everyone.
Can you explain how you gain access to somebody else’s customary fishing area?
(Prompt: 1. Do you have to negotiate access to somebody else’s marine tenure? 2. When you
fish for your household, are you able to fish for live fish? 3. Who makes the decisions about
where you can fish? 4. Are these decisions strictly adhered to?)
• She can actually fish in another passage e.g. Vocambo to Charapoana. Chief’s
decisions on fishing controls or management are adhered to by the people.
• In the case of another passage, a person who usually fishes on Charapoana has to have
the permission of the Chief of Lumalihe or Moggo passages to fish there. He can catch
LRF when fishing for his household. The Chiefs directives are usually adhered to.
• Reef owners have the final say in the resources they own and the Chief of that tribe
will give the final say. It is usually adhered to when the management rules are made.
• Permission must be gained from the Chief of that fishing area. Live fish fishing and
fishing for the household are often concurrent as the bycatch from the live fish fishing
is taken back to the village for subsistence.
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• The Chiefs make decisions on marine resources and they either close or open them for
use. The customary marine tenure, however, is starting to erode e.g. Johnson Kengalu
and his brothers acquiring their own reef and sea resources.
• All reefs in Luaniua are under the Chief’s discretion.
• Fishing is open access at anytime, anywhere in Pelau except for beche-de-mer and
Trochus that are regulated by the Council of Chiefs.
• Chief and his councilors control everything in the sea.
• There are no restrictions to the fishing grounds. Chiefs control the use of sea
resources.
• Originally, Chiefs had rights on all reefs but there is a tendency that the island owners
are claiming their own reefs. A good example is will be Johnson Kengalu’s islands at
Lopaha. Fishing is still open access.
Could you describe how you would like to see the LRFFT managed?
(Prompt: 1. Who would you like to manage the fishery? 2. How do you feel about: i) seasonal
closures? ii) minimum sizes? iii) maximum sizes? iv) protected areas i.e. no fishing or
harvesting?)
• She thinks that the spawning fish should be managed for future generations to
continue to use.
• He thinks technical people should advise the resource owners on how to manage the
resource. The reef owners themselves should take the initiative in managing and
controlling the resource.
• He would like the management rules to be taught by technical people and then be run
by the reef owners themselves.
• He thinks that we should close fishing for two years, or fishing just two days of the
five that they currently fish. He thinks that resource owners themselves should choose
which or what management strategy to use. We should look to other avenues where
we can make money i.e. diversification.
• He feels that the Ontong Java people do not have enough knowledge to manage the
LRFFT fishery and wants the government or overseas advisors to formulate and
manage the resource for them. He also wants the technical people to teach them how
to manage the resource.
• He supports the idea of management and wants closures at certain times in certain
areas e.g. spawning seasons.
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• Conservation and management should be carried out and technical help should come
to the people. The people should be taught to manage their resources.
• We should manage the LRFFT. We should fish only outside the spawning season to
give the fish a chance to reproduce.
• He feels that the Ontong Java people should manage their own resources and get
technical help from outside organisations and the Fisheries Department to help them.
• He believes that we should establish ‘no take’ areas and wishes that we should stop
night diving in Ontong Java. He believes in managing the fish resources properly.
What do you think about the people of the village having involvement in other aspects of
the fishery?
(Prompt: Would you be interested in participating in fish keeping, exporting, quality control,
monitoring, data management etc.?
• She thinks it is easier just to sell the fish to a LRFFT company, but on the other hand,
it is best that resource owners should be involved in managing the resource.
• It is very important that the people be taught how to manage their own resources and
later be responsible in making decisions on what benefits there are for the resource
owners in the future.
• He fully supports the notion that villagers and resource owners should participate
fully.
• Participation by the resource owners is very important. We would like the Fisheries
and others to train us how to manage our own LRFFT project. We would like to run
our own trade and throw out the foreign exploiters.
• He wants the resource owners to be taught on how to manage their own fisheries
resources. Marketing, controlling and regulating of the sea resources should be home
bred.
• He wants the villagers to be involved in all the management activities of the LRFFT so
that they become managers of their own resource.
• He thinks that the community should be involved in managing their own resources.
• He believes that the community should be involved in managing, controlling and
marketing of resources. He strongly believes that all resource owners should be
involved.