FAO study identifies small fish with a big role to play feeding Africa’s drylands
Boom-and-bust fisheries
have untapped potential to bolster livelihoods, resilience and
nutrition
14 June 2016, ROME-Small,
fast growing wild fish could be crucial allies in the race to end
hunger in some of the world's most chronically poor and underfed
regions, according to a new FAO report on fisheries in the drylands
of sub-Saharan Africa.
Water is an ephemeral
resource in Africa's dryland regions, with water bodies forming and
disappearing in a relatively short period of time. Despite this, fish
- some of which weigh as little as a few grams at maturity - can
survive and thrive in these environments, meaning the continent's
dryland fisheries are in fact highly productive and resilient, the
report says.
Output from dryland
fisheries fluctuates due to climate trends - mainly low and above all
uncertain rainfall -but productive potential is very high in smaller
water bodies, some of which appear only once a decade but can produce
up to 150 kilograms of fish per hectare per year. Together, these
small water bodies cover a much larger area than the sub-Saharan
region's lakes and reservoirs.
Properly managed, these
bodies in southern Africa alone could produce 1.25 million tonnes of
fish -- half the total recorded inland fisheries yield of the entire
continent, the report found.
While the small-scale
fisheries sector is often neglected by policy makers, and even
dismissed for its inability to generate wealth, it can be very
efficient as a buffer resource. When mixed with crop and livestock
activities allows for resilient and diversified livelihoods in an
unpredictable environment, say the authors of Fisheries in the
Drylands of Sub-Saharan Africa.
The report also found
higher fish consumption in dryland areas than reported in official
figures, indicating an unexpectedly important role in local food
security, leading the researchers to explore management improvements
for an inherently boom-and-bust resource.
Fish offer a nutritional
punch, delivering the cheapest form of animal protein as well as
amino acids, fats and micronutrients that are otherwise hard to
obtain in the sub-Saharan drylands, where reported per capita fish
consumption is much lower than the Africa-wide average of 10
kilograms per year.
How can you get fish in a
dryland?
"Fish are incredibly
productive when conditions are right," according to lead author
Jeppe Kolding, a professor of biology at the University of Bergen in
Norway. Their egg-laying capacities made them "more like insects
than other vertebrates," he said.
Half of sub-Saharan Africa
consists of dryland areas, where surface water fluctuates widely and
ecosystems are adapted to unpredictable precipitation.
Indeed, Lake Ngami in
Botswana and Lake Liambezi in Namibia were both dry for more than two
decades while today they are characterized by outstanding fish
yields. And dryland fisheries - by definition highly variable - can
produce up to four times the amount of fish as a large tropical lake
or reservoir, according to the report.
Just how fish survive such
daunting habitat changes - Sudan's Khasm el-Girba reservoir is
flushed dry every year but fish always rush back - is not fully
understood. Clarias gariepinus - African catfish - can survive by
burying themselves in mud, while other species evidently find refuge
in small nearby streams, both strategies that, thanks to the
roller-coaster demography allowed by fish fecundity, fit the common
local claim that "fish come with the rains."
A practical path to
increase the benefits of dryland fisheries
While fisheries cannot be
a magic bullet for the 390 million people who live in Africa's
dryland areas, they have a key role delivering Blue Growth, because
they can be leveraged to provide multiple benefits.
The massive productive
potential of dryland fisheries represents a critical asset - dietary
protein and economic option - in a region where food and nutritional
needs are unlikely to be satisfied by agricultural development alone.
Exploiting it will require
recognition of fisheries in dryland water management, food and
nutrition policies. Further benefits could be had if adequate
processing and storage facilities were introduced, as sun-dried fish
caught in a boom year can last for years and could be tapped as a
local supply for emergency food rations around the region.
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