All the participants reported that piracy occurs in some of the f

All the participants reported that piracy occurs in some of the fishing areas because of lack of enforcement of maritime laws. Padma’s participants in vulnerability matrices ranked piracy as the main non-climatic factor affecting fishing activities negatively. The pirates sometimes take money before MK-2206 mouse fishing, rob fish and fishing assets, and keep people on-board as hostages for ransoms. One boat owner from Padma said in his oral history

interview that “I need to buy 2 tokens [informal money receipts] at the cost of 40,00 TK from two groups of pirates in a season to do fishing”. In few cases the pirates have killed fishermen and captains if they resist or do not provide ransom. Together, piracy increases investment and incurs economic losses for the fishing business, thereby reinforcing economic barriers. All participants observed that overfishing has occurred near-shore due to lack of enforcement of fishing

regulations. Near-shore overfishing pushes boats further from shore where they are more exposed to cyclones. Lack of enforcement of fishing regulations also impairs safety in boats and reinforces technological barriers. According to the fishing regulations each fishing boat needs to have a licence, life-saving equipment for each fisherman, a radio, NADPH-cytochrome-c2 reductase a transponder (navigation instrument) etc. Yet www.selleckchem.com/Bcl-2.html the authorities frequently ignore the safety code, especially in Padma. According to fishermen in Padma (during FGDs), some boat owners manage to license their boats without following the regulations, by bribing the authorities. Some boats in Padma do not have a licence at all. These boats are hardly monitored at all to check their compliance with regulations. Lack of access to fish markets makes fishing less profitable and creates pressure to catch more fish. All fish from Padma and half of the fish from Kutubdia Para need to be sold in an auction via commissioning

agents. According to oral history and FGD participants these agents charge 1% of the revenue. If informal credit is taken from a commissioning agent (dadondar) to run the fishing, then the fish must have to be sold, sometimes at lower prices, via that particular agent who charges for both selling the fish and giving credit. This fish marketing system is considered by the boat owners as unfair as it reduces their profit, and ultimately forces the fishermen to maximise the catch. Our results resonate with other recent studies that highlight a range of limits and barriers to adaptation to climate variability and change [1], [2], [3], [4], [6], [18] and [19].

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