Examining fishing activities based on in-situ tracking and oceanographic characteristics in Aru Sea and surroundings

Author:IMBeR IPO Date:2024-12-11 Hits:12

Authors: Noir P. Purba, Boby B. Pratama, Lantun P. Dewanti, Syawaludin A. Harahap, Choerunnisa Febriani, Muhammad H. Ilmi, Muhammad R.A. Mahendra, Jafar-Sidik Madihah, and Alexander M.A. Khan

 

Journal: Journal of Sea Research

 

Fisheries activites and oceanographic conditions have a strong relationship. Understanding the complex interplay between fisheries and oceanographic conditions is essential for effective fisheries management. The aim of this research is to analyze the in-situ fishing activities with oceanographic conditions in the Fisheries Management Area (FMA) or WPP-NRI 718 located in the Aru Sea and its surroundings. The main data source is from open global data ship tracking and oceanographic conditions from satellite data. In general, fishing is conducted around the waters of Aru Island. The fishing grounds are strongly influenced by a combination of environmental factors, including sea surface temperatures, chlorophyll-a (Chlor-a) concentrations, sea surface height, and current velocities. A decrease in fishing patterns around Aru Island waters occurs in the eastern season, where fishing tends to occur in the western region (near Timor-Leste). Based on the oceanographic conditions, fishing tends to occur in regions with warmer conditions ranging from 27 to 29 °C, moderate Chlor-a (1.02–3.01 mg/m3), a relatively high surface height (0.17–0.32 m), and slow surface currents.

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Fig. 6: GAM-derived effect of the four oceanographic variables on the fishing catch, from the model constructed with: (a) SST, (b) SSH, (c) Chlor-a, (d) Ocean currents.


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