Ghost gear, fisheries waste and the push for better solutions
Fishing gear is designed to catch, but when it is lost, abandoned or discarded, it can continue harming marine life, damaging habitats and creating risks for fisheries and navigation. This blog explores how REBYC-III CLME+ is supporting regional work on ghost gear, gear marking and practical systems for prevention, reporting, retrieval, disposal and long-term ALDFG management.
Bycatch, marine life and the future of fisheries in the CLME+ region
Bycatch affects far more than the target catch, placing additional pressure on non-target and vulnerable species such as juveniles, sharks, rays and marine turtles. For the Caribbean region, already facing overfishing, habitat degradation, pollution and climate-related stress, these losses can weaken marine ecosystems and the fisheries, livelihoods and food systems that depend on them. REBYC-III CLME+ is responding through practical interventions to reduce harmful interactions between fishing gear and marine life across Barbados, Guyana, Suriname and Trinidad and Tobago.
Beyond Catch: Future-Proofing Fisheries Through an Ecosystem Approach
Explore what the Ecosystem Approach to Fisheries means and why it matters for healthier marine ecosystems, stronger fishing communities and more sustainable fisheries. Learn how EAF connects governance, livelihoods, bycatch management, protection of vulnerable species, and action on abandoned, lost and otherwise discarded fishing gear.

