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Title
Seychelles fisheries country profile: 1990-1994 |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/1834/1332 |
Date
1995 |
Author(s)
Boulle, D.P. |
Abstract
Seychelles is composed of over 100 islands with a land area of approximately 455 kmē, centred close to 4°30'S and 55°30'E. The combined coastline is approximately 600 km long, the oceanic shelf totals about 50 000 kmē and the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) is over 1 370 000 kmē. The total population (1994 census) stands at just under 74 000. in 1994, the population registered a growth rate of 2.2%. The GDP (1994) was SR 2373.8 million, fisheries representing 4.8% of this sum. Licensing agreements for foreign fishing activities provided a yearly revenue of SR8 million. Port Victoria is seen as a prime centre for tuna fishing operations in the Indian Ocean. In the artisanal fishery just under 900 persons are working. The largest contributor to catch by vessel type are the traditional whaler vessels representing 47.8% of the total catch. Over 66.3% of the catch is by the handline method. Carangidae representing 24% and Lutjanidae 19% of total landings. There are six specific objectives to the fisheries sector policy, which aims as resource development and maximisation of potential benefits. Nearshore fishery resources are considered to be heavily exploited, however opportunities exist around the distant islands and in deeper waters off the Mahe plateau shelf. Aquaculture of molluscs and prawns is being developed and carried out. The main constraints to development are seen as the lack of skilled manpower and foreign exchange. |
Subject(s)
Country profile, Fisheries, Seychelles |
Publisher
Victoria: Seychelles Fishing Authority |
Type of publication
Report |
Format
186058 bytes; 520444 bytes; application/pdf; application/pdf |
Identifier
19 pp. |
Repository
Africa - Ocean Data and Information Network of Africa (OdinAfrica)
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Added to C-A: 2008-12-22;03:58:41 |
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