West African marine ecosystems are very productive and sustain important
fisheries that have developed rapidly in the last decades. The analysis of
the fishing impact on exploited resources is usually conducted through
single-species assessments. In this study, we propose a complementary
approach that enables to account for some ecosystem effects of fishing. In
Guinea and Senegal, fisheries have developed relatively recently and at the
same time, the collection of landings and surveys data has been carried out.
In consequence, the data collection extends from a period where stocks could
be considered as non exploited to a situation of overexploitation. This
case study is analysed in order to detect shifts in the ecosystem structure
in response to increasing fishing pressure. To this aim, trophic spectra and
long time series of mean trophic level are examined for demersal fish
communities. Trophic spectra display either the distribution of the demersal
community biomass or the commercial catches according to trophic level
classes. Some substantial and statistically significant changes in the
trophic structure of the Senegal and Guinea ecosystems were observed. In
particular, the biomass of the high trophic levels decreased whereas the
lower trophic levels displayed a relative stability or an increase. This
could be linked to a “top-down” fishing effect due to a release of
predation on the lower trophic levels of the demersal fish community. In
Senegal, the mean trophic level decreased significantly for both the catches
and the demersal community biomass. Such a decrease was also observed for
the coastal demersal biomass in Guinea. This showed that fishing activities
had an impact on the trophic structure of the ecosystem, and a “fishing
down marine food web” effect was shown in West Africa for the first time.