01 Policy Framework and Guidelines/ Codes
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12066/5810
2024-03-28T22:13:47ZResolution and Plan of Action on Sustainable Fisheries for Food Security for the ASEAN Region Towards 2030
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12066/6583
Resolution and Plan of Action on Sustainable Fisheries for Food Security for the ASEAN Region Towards 2030
The Resolution on Sustainable Fisheries for Food Security for the ASEAN Region Towards 2030 be implemented as soon as possible and use the Plan of Action on Sustainable Fisheries for Food Security for the ASEAN Region Towards 2030 adopted by the Senior Officials of the ASEAN-SEAFDEC Member Countries on the occasion of the Special Senior Official Meeting of the 41st ASEAN Ministerial Meeting on Agriculture and Forestry (SSOM-41st AMAF) held virtually on 5 August 2020 in Brunei Darussalam, and the Senior Official of Japan responsible for fisheries through ad referendum, as priority actions for formulating and implementing programs, projects, and activities by the AMSs and through the appropriate ASEAN-SEAFDEC mechanisms.
2020-01-01T00:00:00ZPolicy Recommendations and Strategic Plans of Actions: Fishery Resources Enhancement through Habitat Improvement and Management
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12066/6525
Policy Recommendations and Strategic Plans of Actions: Fishery Resources Enhancement through Habitat Improvement and Management
2019-01-01T00:00:00ZPolicy Guidelines for Regional Conservation and Management of Tropical Anguillid Eels Resources in Southeast Asia
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12066/6523
Policy Guidelines for Regional Conservation and Management of Tropical Anguillid Eels Resources in Southeast Asia
Eel resources are mainly utilized as direct human consumption not only in Europe but also in East and Southeast Asia. European eels have become regulated species by CITES for international trade since 2009 due to resource decline and potential extinction. Recently, large consumption of the Japonica eel species in East Asia has led to the rapidly decreasing amount of glass eels. On the other hand, the demand for tropical anguillid eels in Southeast Asia which has been increasing significantly over the years, not only for domestic consumption but also for export to China, Korea, Taiwan, and Japan among others, could lead to the decline of the resource.
The development of this document took into consideration the Policy Recommendations on Conservation and Management of Catadromous Eel Resources and Aquaculture in Southeast Asia adopted by the Seventeenth Meeting of the Fisheries Consultative Group of the ASEAN-SEAFDEC Strategic Partnership (FCG/ASSP) in December 2014, and the Twenty-third Meeting of the ASEAN Sectoral Working Group on Fisheries (ASWGFi) in June 2015. Moreover, attention was also paid on the recommendation of the CITES Animal Committee Meeting in 2018 on the need to strengthen the management of tropical anguillid eels to ensure their sustainable utilization.
In this connection, the need to strengthen the management for eel species worldwide has been recognized making it also necessary for the Southeast Asian region to take appropriate management measures for eel resources and their sustainable utilization. Considering that resources management measures for tropical anguillid eels have not yet been in place in the ASEAN member countries where the fisheries of tropical anguillid eel exist, and in order to develop and implement regional management measures for tropical anguillid eels, the necessary information on the tropical anguillid eel species, such as catch data, distribution areas, aquaculture production, and export data among others, should be compiled.
2019-01-01T00:00:00ZRegional guidelines for responsible fisheries in Southeast Asia: Supplementary guidelines on co-management using group user rights, fishery statistics, indicators and fisheries refugia
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12066/5960
Regional guidelines for responsible fisheries in Southeast Asia: Supplementary guidelines on co-management using group user rights, fishery statistics, indicators and fisheries refugia
This 84-page Supplementary Guidelines further elaborates issues contained in the Regional Guidelines for Responsible Fisheries Management, i.e. Co-Management Using Group User Rights, Fishery Statistics, Indicators and Fisheries Refugia. The Guidelines is envisaged to assist the Southeast Asian countries in developing the most practical national system to improve their respective fisheries management towards responsible and sustainable fisheries.
2006-03-01T00:00:00Z