Abstract
Catch monitoring and surveys were used to assess the seahorse trade in Vietnam. Despite low daily catch rates, potentially 6.5 t of dried seahorses (∼2.2 million seahorses) were taken annually as bycatch by trawlers operating out of five coastal provinces of Vietnam. Individual seahorse catches were collated by a few local buyers, who supplied wholesalers in three major markets: Ho Chi Minh City, Hai Phong City and Da Nang. Domestic consumption was small and most seahorses were exported, generally through unofficial and unregulated channels across the northern border into Guangxi province of China. Overall, the seahorse trade was of low economic value to Vietnam, but may constitute an important source of income to upper level buyers and exporters. Most fishers and buyers surveyed reported that seahorse catch had declined over time. This paper should help in meeting the new CITES requirements — through implementation of an Appendix II listing in 2004 — that all international trade in seahorses must be monitored and managed for sustainability.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Broadhurst M.K. 2000. Modifications to reduce bycatch in prawn trawls: a review and framework for development. Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries 10: 27–60.
Dao Xuan Loc and Hoang Phi 1991. Results of the surveys of Hippocampus seahorses in the coastal areas of the central provinces and the breeding of Hippocampus kuda seahorses in cement tanks [Tuyen Tap Nghien Cuu Bien III]. Collection of Marine Research works 3: 235–245 [in Vietnamese].
Do Huu Hoang, Truong Si Ky and Ho Thi Hoa 1998. Feeding behaviour and food of seahorses in Vietnam. In: The Marine Biology of the South China Sea III. Proceeding of the third International Conference on the Marine biology of the South China Sea, Hong Kong. Hong Kong University Press, pp. 307–320.
FAO 1995. Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries. Fisheries and Agriculture Organisation, Rome, Italy.
Foster S.J. and Vincent A.C.J. 2004. Life history and ecology of seahorses: implications for conservation and management. Journal of Fish Biology 65(1): 1–61.
Hodgson G. 1999. A global assessment of human effects on coral reefs. Marine Pollution Bulletin 38: 345–355.
Lau P.P.F. and Parry-Jones R. 1999. The Hong Kong Trade in Live Reef Fish for Food. TRAFFIC East Asia and World Wide Fund for Nature Hong Kong, Hong Kong.
Le Dien Duc and Broad S. 1995. Investigations into Tortoise and Freshwater Turtles Trade in Vietnam. IUCN, Gland, Switzerland.
Li Wenjun, Fuller T.K. and Wang Song 1996. A survey of the wildlife trade in Guangxi and Guangdong, China. TRAFFIC Bulletin 16: 9–16.
Li Yiming and Li Dinamo 1998. The dynamics of trade in live wildlife across the Guangxi border between China and Vietnam during 1993–1996 and its control strategies. Biodiversity and Conservation 7: 895–914.
Lourie S.A., Pritchard J.C., Casey S.P., Truong S.K., Hall H.J. and Vincent A.C.J. 1999a. The taxonomy of Vietnam’s exploited seahorses (family Syngnathidae). Biological Journal of Linnean Society 66: 231–256.
Lourie S., Vincent A.C.J. and Hall H.J. 1999b. Seahorses: An Identification Guide to the World’s Species and Their Conservation. Project Seahorse, London, UK.
Milton D.A. 2001. Assessing the susceptibility to fishing of populations of rare trawl bycatch: sea snakes caught by Australia’s Northern Prawn Fishery. Biological Conservation 101: 281–290.
Ministry of Fisheries 1996. Technical, Financial and Economic Assessment of Capture Fisheries and Aquaculture in Vietnam. Final Report.
Ministry of Science, Technology, and Environment 1992. Red Data Book of Vietnam, Vol. 1. Animals, Science and Technology Publishing House, Hanoi.
Pajaro M.G., Meeuwig J.J., Giles B.G. and Vincent A.C.J. 2004. Biology, fishery and trade of sea moths (Pisces: Pegasidae) in the central Philippines. Oryx 38(4): 432–438.
Pajaro M.G., Vincent A.C.J., Buyhat D.Y. and Perante N.C. 1997. The role of seahorse fishers in conservation and management. In: Proceedings of the 1st International Symposium of Marine Conservation, Hong Kong. Hong Kong Marine Conservation Society, Hong Kong, pp. 118–126.
Sadovy Y.J. and Vincent A.C.J. 2002. Ecological issues and the trade in live reef fishes. In: Coral Reef Fishes. Elsevier Science, USA.
Stobutzki I.C., Miller M.J. and Brewer D. 2001a. Sustainability of fishery bycatch: a process for assessing highly diverse and numerous bycatch. Environmental Conversation 28: 167–181.
Stobutzki I.C., Miller M.J., Jones P. and Salini J.P. 2001b. Bycatch diversity and variation in a tropical Australian penaeid fishery; the implications for monitoring. Fisheries Research 53: 283–301.
Truong Si Ky and Ton Nu My Nga 1995. Reproduction of two species of seahorses, Hippocampus histrix and H. trimaculatus in Binh Thuan waters. In: Proceedings of the First Symposium on Marine Biology, October 1995. Nha Trang, Vietnam [In Vietnamese].
Tuan L.Q. 2003. Country Case Study: Trade in Fisheries and Human Development Vietnam. Asia Pacific Regional Initiative on Trade, Economic Governance and Human Development, United Nations Development Program, Hanoi, Vietnam.
Vincent A.C.J. 1996. The International Trade in Seahorses. TRAFFIC International, Cambridge, UK.
Wood E. 1985. Exploitation of Coral Reef Fishers for the Aquarium Trade. Marine Conservation Society, Ross-on-Wye, UK.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2006 Springer
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Giles, B.G., Ky, T.S., Do Hoang, H., Vincent, A.C.J. (2006). The catch and trade of seahorses in Vietnam. In: Hawksworth, D.L., Bull, A.T. (eds) Human Exploitation and Biodiversity Conservation. Topics in Biodiversity and Conservation, vol 3. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5283-5_10
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4020-5283-5_10
Received:
Accepted:
Publisher Name: Springer, Dordrecht
Print ISBN: 978-1-4020-5282-8
Online ISBN: 978-1-4020-5283-5
eBook Packages: Biomedical and Life SciencesBiomedical and Life Sciences (R0)