Global International Waters Assessment: Indonesian Seas, GIWA Regional Assessment 57
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Date
2005Author
United Nations Environment Programme, GEF, University of Kalmar, Sweden
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RT Generic T1 Global International Waters Assessment: Indonesian Seas, GIWA Regional Assessment 57 A1 United Nations Environment Programme, GEF, University of Kalmar, Sweden YR 2005 LK http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11822/8812 PB United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), GEF, University of Kalmar, Sweden AB TY - GEN T1 - Global International Waters Assessment: Indonesian Seas, GIWA Regional Assessment 57 AU - United Nations Environment Programme, GEF, University of Kalmar, Sweden Y1 - 2005 UR - http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11822/8812 PB - United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), GEF, University of Kalmar, Sweden AB - @misc{20.500.11822_8812 author = {United Nations Environment Programme, GEF, University of Kalmar, Sweden}, title = {Global International Waters Assessment: Indonesian Seas, GIWA Regional Assessment 57}, year = {2005}, abstract = {}, url = {http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11822/8812} } @misc{20.500.11822_8812 author = {United Nations Environment Programme, GEF, University of Kalmar, Sweden}, title = {Global International Waters Assessment: Indonesian Seas, GIWA Regional Assessment 57}, year = {2005}, abstract = {}, url = {http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11822/8812} } TY - GEN T1 - Global International Waters Assessment: Indonesian Seas, GIWA Regional Assessment 57 AU - United Nations Environment Programme, GEF, University of Kalmar, Sweden UR - http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11822/8812 PB - United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), GEF, University of Kalmar, Sweden AB -Metadata
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This report presents the GIWA assessment of the Indonesian Seas region, which comprises some 18 000 islands, is geologically and topographically diverse, and lies at the global centre of tropical marine biodiversity. The region supports a rapidly growing coastal population, and has rapidly deteriorating marine ecosystems with the likely imminent collapse of many of its coral reef-associated and pelagic fish populations. Unsustainable exploitation of living resources has caused severe environmental and socio-economic impacts across much of the region, and the major transboundary influence of the live food fish and aquarium trades, particularly poison fishing using cyanide, are further discussed. The causal chain analysis discusses the root causes of destructive fishing practices by investigating the cause-effect pathways of the issue. Policy options are analysed in order to enhance the management and improve the environmental quality of the region’s aquatic environment.
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