Medidas de Gestao das Pescarias Marinhas e Aquicultura 2019 The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2018 | Page 125

THE STATE OF WORLD FISHERIES AND AQUACULTURE 2018 FIGURE 34 INLAND FISH PRODUCTION PER CAPITA OF POPULATION PER YEAR, 2015 0 0 2 4 8 1 PRODUCTION kg per capita 0−0.5 0.5−2 2−4 4−8 8−16 16−35 No data NOTE: Final boundary between the Sudan and South Sudan has not yet been determined. SOURCE: FAO, 2017n not function. Inland fishing households in Cambodia get more than 50 percent of their income from fishing; in the mainstream Mekong River 20 percent of household income comes from fishing; in parts of the Zambezi Basin, fish provides more household income than cattle; in the Brazilian Amazon, households obtain 30 percent of household income from fishing (FAO, 2010a). Small-scale fisheries in the drylands of sub-Saharan Africa can be highly productive and resilient. They may be highly seasonal or even periodic, but with appropriate investment they could generate increased income for both fishers and processors (Kolding et al., 2016). value data on capture fisheries from its Members. Global inland fisheries production is generally considered to be underestimated (FAO, 1999b, 2003a; Welcomme, 2011). Thorpe, Zepeda and Funge-Smith (2018) present a preliminar y, conser vative estimate of the total use value of reported global inland finfish as USD 26 billion for 2015. This fig ure increases to over USD 43 billion if hidden, unreported production and freshwater molluscs and crustaceans are included. The global non-market use value of inland recreational fisheries was estimated to be USD 65 billion to USD 79 billion (Box 9). Determining the global value of inland fisheries remains a challenge, as FAO does not collect Inland fisheries provide benefits towards all four of the pillars of food securit y. Fish, crustaceans, Goal 2: Zero hunger | 109 |