Integrated Models of the Social–Ecological Dynamics of Recreational Fisheries

Buchkapitel

Integrated models of recreational fisheries as social–ecological systems contain—at a minimum—two dynamically linked components: a fishing effort or harvest dynamics sub-model (representing recreational fisher behaviour) and a population dynamics sub-model (representing fish dynamics in response to exploi tation). Here, we review and categorize the use of integrated models, provide a set of general instructions for building them, and identify gaps and opportunities for further development. The structure of coupled social–ecological models diverges along two major paths: agent-based models that follow the behaviour of individual autonomous agents (generally fishers or fish) and models that track the aggregate dynamics of a fish population and the fishing effort exerted on it by fishers. Most integrated models published so far are lopsided in their development. That is, they often contain one sub-model (harvest or population dynamics) that is detailed and grounded in empirical data, whereas the other sub-model is a more generic repre sentation of that process. The future of integrated models depends on increased collaboration between the social and ecological sciences, a rigorous quantification of both fish and fisher behavioural patterns, and a confrontation of model predictions with actual system behaviour.

Jensen, O. P., Arlinghaus, R., Golden, A. S., Janssen, M. A., Solomon, C. T., & van Poorten, B. T. (2026). Integrated models of the social–ecological dynamics of recreational fisheries. In K. L. Pope, R. Arlinghaus, L. M. Hunt, A. J. Lynch, & B. T. van Poorten (Eds.), Understanding recreational fishers: Disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches for fisheries management (pp. 661–692). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-99739-6_21


Veröffentlicht : 2026
Erschienen in : K. L. Pope, R. Arlinghaus, L. M. Hunt, A. J. Lynch, & B. T. van Poorten (Eds.), Understanding recreational fishers: Disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches for fisheries management (pp. 661–692). Springer.