dc.description.abstract |
Recreational fishing is a highly socioecological process. Although recreational fisheries are self-regulating and
resilient, changing anthropogenic pressure drives these fisheries to overharvest and collapse. Here, we evaluate
the effect of demographic and environmental stochasticity for a social-ecological two-species fish model. In the
presence of noise, we find that an increase in harvesting rate drives a critical transition from high-yield–low-price
fisheries to low-yield–high-price fisheries. To calculate stochastic trajectories for demographic noise, we derive
the master equation corresponding to the model and perform a Monte Carlo simulation. Moreover, the analysis
of the probabilistic potential and mean first-passage time reveals the resilience of alternative steady states. We
also describe the efficacy of a few generic indicators in forecasting sudden transitions. Furthermore, we show
that incorporating social norms on the model allows a moderate fish density to maintain despite higher harvesting
rates. Overall, our study highlights the occurrence of critical transitions in a stochastic social-ecological model
and suggests ways to mitigate them. |
en_US |