SpearfishingMap

Solomon Islands

Oceania · Melanesia

Breath-hold (free-diving) spearfishing is permitted in the Solomon Islands and is a common subsistence and small-scale commercial fishing method nationwide. However, the use of any underwater breathing equipment (SCUBA / hookah / compressor) to harvest marine resources is a criminal offence under Regulation 25 of the Fisheries Management Regulations 2017 (made under the Fisheries Management Act 2015, No. 2 of 2015). A SCUBA-for-harvesting ban has been in force since January 2004 and was carried forward into the 2017 Regulations. Spearfishers must also observe the protected-species, size and seasonal limits in the Fisheries Management (Prohibited Activities) Regulations 2018 (e.g. minimum 65 cm for bumphead parrotfish and Maori/humphead wrasse; turtles, dugong, and certain shells fully protected). Provincial governments and community-based management (customary tabu/no-take areas) impose additional local bans, and harvesting is prohibited in protected areas such as the Arnavon Community Marine Park. A recreational 'Sports Fishing' licence category exists in the 2017 fee schedule. Enforcement is generally weak, especially at the local level.

Restricted
Fiabilité des donnéesFiabilité élevée

Dernière mise à jour juin 15, 2026

Cadre réglementaire

  • §Fisheries Management Act 2015 (No. 2 of 2015)
  • §Fisheries Management Regulations 2017 (Legal Notice No. 2 of 2017)
  • §Fisheries Management (Prohibited Activities) Regulations 2018 (L.N. No. 61 of 2018)
Fusil harpon
Autorisé
Plongée bouteille
Interdit

La loi, verbatim

Textes juridiques

Les dispositions législatives et réglementaires exactes qui régissent la chasse sous-marine ici, citées telles que publiées, avec un lien vers chaque source officielle.

01Regulation 25Solomon Islands · national

Underwater breathing equipment (SCUBA) prohibition for harvesting fisheries resources

Fisheries Management Regulations 2017 (Legal Notice No. 2 of 2017), made under the Fisheries Management Act 2015 (No. 2 of 2015)

ENOriginal

25. (1) Unless authorised by the Director under sub-regulation (3), a person commits an offence if the person uses or has in his or her possession underwater breathing equipment for the purpose of harvesting any fisheries resource. Maximum penalty: 50,000 penalty units or 6 months imprisonment, or both. (2) In this regulation, “underwater breathing equipment” includes all equipment the use of which will enable a person to descend and remain underwater whilst breathing. (3) The Director may authorise a person to use underwater breathing equipment to harvest a fisheries resource or carry underwater breathing equipment on board a registered fishing vessel: (a) if the equipment is not used for commercial fishing; (b) to retrieve lost fishing gear; or (c) for emergencies involving the preservation of life or the safety of the vessel or other vessels.

02Regulation 26Solomon Islands · national

Commission of underwater-breathing-equipment offence by body corporate

Fisheries Management Regulations 2017 (Legal Notice No. 2 of 2017)

ENOriginal

26. A body corporate convicted under regulation 25 is liable to a maximum fine of 500,000 penalty units where an offence is committed by its employees, servants or agents.

03Regulation 4 and Schedule (columns 1-3)Solomon Islands · national

Protected species and minimum sizes relevant to spearfishing (Schedule)

Fisheries Management (Prohibited Activities) Regulations 2018 (L.N. No. 61 of 2018)

ENOriginal

A person who engages in conduct specified in the Schedule, column 1, in relation to fish or gear specified opposite in column 2, commits an offence carrying the penalty in column 3. Schedule (extract): 3. fish for, sell or buy — (iv) any maori wrasse (Cheilinus undulatus) less than 65cm in total length when measured from the furthermost point of the snout to the end of the tail; (v) any bumphead parrotfish (Balbometopon muricatum) less than 65cm in total length when measured from the furthermost point of the snout to the end of the tail — 30 000 penalty units or 3 months imprisonment or both. 4. fish for and retain, be in possession of, sell, buy or export — (i) any nesting turtle; (ii) any leatherback turtle of the species Dermochelys coriacea; or (iii) any dugong (Dugong dugong) — 40 000 penalty units or 4 months imprisonment or both. 2. fish for and retain, be in possession of, sell or buy — (i) any coconut crab of the species Birgus latro ... (2) during the breeding season from June to October in a calendar year ... — 40 000 penalty units or 4 months imprisonment or both.

04Regulation 29 (under the Fisheries Act 1998)Solomon Islands · national

Historical SCUBA-for-harvesting prohibition in force from January 2004 (predecessor of Reg 25)

Regulation made under the Fisheries Act 1998, in force January 2004 (Regulation 29), as documented by FAO/FishCode Review No.19

ENOriginal

Any person using under-water breathing apparatus for the purpose of harvesting any marine resource shall be guilty of an offence and liable to a fine not exceeding five thousand dollars or six months imprisonment or both such fine and imprisonment.

Quand vous pouvez plonger

Saisons et restrictions temporelles

Périodes de fermeture, d'ouverture et de restriction tout au long de l'année. Confirmez toujours localement les fermetures propres à chaque espèce.

janv.
févr.
mars
avr.
mai
juin
juil.
août
sept.
oct.
nov.
déc.
FerméeRéglementéeOuverte
  • FerméeCoconut crab (Birgus latro)juin 1 – oct. 31

    Coconut crab may not be fished for, possessed, sold or bought during the breeding season from June to October in any calendar year, nor if under 9cm carapace length or carrying/stripped of eggs. Relevant where coconut crab is taken incidentally; not a marine spearfishing target but part of the protected-species regime.

Autorisation de pêcher

Licence

Ce dont vous avez besoin pour être autorisé dans l'eau, ce que cela coûte et comment l'obtenir.

Licence : inconnue — vérifiez localementvia Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources (MFMR)

Apply to the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources (MFMR), Honiara.

Obtenez votre licence

Ouvre le portail officiel · fisheries.gov.sb

Type
Sports Fishing licence (Recreational or Commercial sub-categories) listed in the Fisheries Management Regulations 2017 fee schedule. It is not clearly established that an individual breath-hold subsistence spearfisher requires a personal licence; customary/subsistence fishing is largely outside the commercial licensing regime.
Coût
Sports Fishing – Recreational: SBD 6,000; Sports Fishing – Commercial: SBD 10,000; plus Administration/Licence Fee SBD 3,000 (per the 2017 Regulations fee schedule).
Validité
unknown
Comment l'obtenir
Apply to the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources (MFMR), Honiara.
Autorité
Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources (MFMR)

Matériel et technique

Règles d'équipement

Quel matériel est autorisé, comment il peut être utilisé et les conditions associées.

Fusil harponAutorisée
Plongée bouteilleInterdite

Restrictions

  • Use or possession of underwater breathing equipment (SCUBA, hookah, compressor) for the purpose of harvesting any fisheries resource is a criminal offence (Reg 25, FMR 2017); the Director may grant limited authorisations (non-commercial use, retrieving lost gear, or emergencies).
  • Breath-hold (free-dive) spearfishing with sling spears, hand spears and rubber-powered/homemade spear guns is the customary and lawful method.
  • Underwater flashlights/torches for night spearfishing are widely used; night spearfishing is frequently restricted or banned at the community level due to impacts on parrotfish and grouper spawning aggregations.
  • Explosives, poison and other noxious substances for taking fish are prohibited (long-standing prohibition; the 1972 Fisheries Act s.8 prohibited explosives/poison).

The defining national rule is the SCUBA/underwater-breathing-apparatus harvesting ban (in force since January 2004 and re-enacted as Reg 25 of the 2017 Regulations). Spearfishing per se is legal when done on breath-hold; it is not a separately licensed gear at the subsistence level.

Ce que vous pouvez prélever

Limites de capture et espèces protégées

Quotas journaliers, tailles minimales et espèces qui ne doivent jamais être prélevées.

Limite journalière

unknown

Tailles minimales

  • Bumphead (humphead) parrotfish (Bolbometopon muricatum)min 65 cm
  • Maori / humphead wrasse (Cheilinus undulatus)min 65 cm
  • Mud crab (Scylla serrata)min 12 cm
  • Crayfish / spiny lobster (Panulirus spp.) carapacemin 8 cm
  • Coconut crab (Birgus latro) carapacemin 9 cm

Espèces protégées — ne pas prélever

  • ProtégéeAll sea turtles (including nesting turtles and leatherback Dermochelys coriacea) – no take/possession/sale/export
  • ProtégéeDugong (Dugong dugon)
  • ProtégéeCrocodile (export of crocodile/parts/products prohibited)
  • ProtégéeGolden cowrie (Callistocypraea aurantium)
  • ProtégéeGlory-of-the-sea cone shell (Conus gloriamaris)
  • ProtégéeGreen snail (Turbo marmoratus)
  • ProtégéeTriton shell (Charonia spp.)
  • ProtégéeGiant clams (Tridacna and Hippopus) not under a management plan – sale/buy/export prohibited
  • ProtégéeProtected sharks (shark finning prohibited; certain shark species protected with safe-release requirement)
  • ProtégéeCertain corals (Acropora humilis, Euphyllia glabrescens, Fungia fungites; live/dead corals and live rock not under a management plan)

Size and species limits come from the Fisheries Management (Prohibited Activities) Regulations 2018 Schedule and apply to all fishing methods including spearfishing. Female/egg-bearing crabs are protected; oyster shell (Pinctada) minimum 10cm shell width. No general per-person daily bag limit for finfish was found in the national instruments reviewed.

Qui peut pêcher

Visiteurs et résidents

Comment les règles diffèrent pour les visiteurs étrangers et les résidents locaux.

Visiteurs étrangers

Exigences

  • Tourist/sport spearfishing is generally conducted through licensed dive/charter operators; a recreational 'Sports Fishing' licence category exists in the 2017 fee schedule (SBD 6,000).
  • The SCUBA-for-harvesting ban (Reg 25) applies to everyone, including tourists – spearfishing on SCUBA is illegal.

Restrictions

  • Customary marine tenure: reef and inshore areas are typically owned/controlled by local communities; permission from customary owners is generally required to fish, including spearfishing.
  • Local community no-take and night-spearfishing bans apply to visitors.

Specific national rules expressly addressing foreign recreational spearfishers were not found; in practice access is governed by customary owners, dive-operator arrangements, and the general prohibited-activities and SCUBA-harvesting rules. Confirm locally before fishing.

Résidents

Customary/subsistence fishing largely falls outside the commercial licensing regime; the Act and regulations generally do not apply to non-commercial customary fishing unless specified.

Exigences

  • Comply with the SCUBA-for-harvesting ban (Reg 25, FMR 2017).
  • Comply with protected-species, size and seasonal limits (Prohibited Activities Regulations 2018).
  • Observe provincial ordinances and customary/community closures.

Avantages

  • Subsistence and customary spearfishing is recognised and is an important, low-cost food source nationwide (responsible for roughly 5-15% of national inshore production, and 50-80% in some remote areas such as the Reef Islands and Ontong Java).

Provincial governments are devolved responsibility for management of reef, inshore and freshwater fisheries within provincial waters, so local rules vary by province and community.

Où sur la côte

Zones autorisées et interdites

Zones nommées ouvertes ou fermées à la chasse sous-marine. Voir l'image complète sur la carte interactive.

Zones interdites

  • Community-managed marine protected area between Isabel and Choiseul provinces, ~169 km2 (upgraded from the 152 km2 conservation area established 1995). Commercial fishing and collecting are banned; the largest hawksbill turtle rookery in the South Pacific. No-take core area where spearfishing/harvesting is prohibited.

  • Under the Makira Province Preservation of Culture and Wildlife Ordinance, the killing of any fish by means of diving with a spear or a spear gun within a one-mile radius of the Ulawa area has been banned. Example of a provincial-government ordinance directly prohibiting spearfishing.

  • Customary tabu / community no-take areas (nationwide)customary / community-based managed area

    Many coastal communities apply customary marine tenure and community-based management to close reefs to fishing. Night spearfishing is commonly one of the first activities banned at community level. Example: Luaniua Village on Ontong Java bans spearfishing inside the lagoon. These customary closures are recognised under the fisheries legal framework.

Conditions sur l'eau

Conditions en direct

Aperçu marin et météo en direct près d'un point de référence côtier en Solomon Islands, fourni par Open-Meteo. Les conditions varient le long de la côte — à considérer comme indicatives.

Conditions marines et météo en direct près de Arnavon Community Marine Park (Arnavon Community Marine Conservation Area).

Conditions

À qui s'adresser

Autorités

Les organismes officiels responsables de la pêche et des licences.

  • Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources (MFMR)

    fisheries authority

    fisheries.gov.sbKukum Highway, P.O. Box G2, Honiara, Solomon Islands; Tel (677) 39143; Fax (677) 38730
  • Provincial Governments (e.g. Makira-Ulawa, Western, Isabel, Choiseul, Malaita Provinces)

    sub-national / provincial fisheries and conservation authority

    fisheries.gov.sbProvincial assemblies make ordinances regulating inshore fishing within provincial waters.
  • Arnavon Community Marine Conservation Area Management Committee

    community marine protected area management

    equatorinitiative.orgRepresentatives of Kia, Katupika and Waghena communities.

D'où cela provient

Sources

Chaque affirmation sur cette page renvoie à l'une de ces références.

  1. [01]

    Fisheries Management Regulations 2017 (Legal Notice No. 2 of 2017), full text – Regulation 25 Underwater breathing equipment

    Officielle
    faolex.fao.orgConsulté le juin 15
  2. [02]

    Fisheries Management (Prohibited Activities) Regulations 2018 (L.N. No. 61 of 2018), full text – protected species and size limits Schedule

    Officielle
    faolex.fao.orgConsulté le juin 15
  3. [03]

    Fisheries Management (Prohibited Activities) Regulations 2018 – ECOLEX record

    Officielle
    ecolex.orgConsulté le juin 15
  4. [04]

    Fisheries Management Act (No. 2 of 2015) – NATLEX/ILO record

    Officielle
    natlex.ilo.orgConsulté le juin 15
  5. [05]

    Solomon Islands National Fisheries Policy 2019-2029 (FAOLEX)

    Officielle
    faolex.fao.orgConsulté le juin 15
  6. [06]

    Gillett, R. & Moy, W. (2006) Spearfishing in the Pacific Islands: Current Status and Management Issues, FAO/FishCode Review No.19 – Section 2.5 Solomon Islands (documents the January 2004 SCUBA ban / Regulation 29 and provincial Ulawa spear ban)

    Secondaire
    fao.orgConsulté le juin 15
  7. [07]

    Solomon Islands – The Fisheries Act 1972 (reprint to 1981), Part V Prohibited Fishing Methods (explosives/poison) – FAOLEX

    Officielle
    faolex.fao.orgConsulté le juin 15
  8. [08]

    Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources (Solomon Islands) – official website / contact

    Officielle
    fisheries.gov.sbConsulté le juin 15
  9. [09]

    Arnarvon Islands / Arnavon Community Marine Park – coordinates and no-take status

    Secondaire
    en.wikipedia.orgConsulté le juin 15

Notes du chercheur

Key point for spearfishers: breath-hold (free-dive) spearfishing is legal and customary in the Solomon Islands, but spearfishing while using SCUBA, hookah or any underwater breathing equipment to harvest marine resources is a criminal offence under Regulation 25 of the Fisheries Management Regulations 2017 (50,000 penalty units / 6 months / both), with limited Director-granted exceptions. This SCUBA-harvesting ban has applied since January 2004 (formerly Regulation 29 under the Fisheries Act 1998). Spearfishers must respect protected species and minimum sizes in the Prohibited Activities Regulations 2018 (notably bumphead parrotfish and humphead/Maori wrasse min 65 cm; turtles, dugong, certain shells and corals fully protected). Most reefs are under customary marine tenure; permission from customary owners is generally needed, and many communities ban night spearfishing and impose no-take tabu areas. Harvesting is prohibited in the Arnavon Community Marine Park and within a one-mile radius of Ulawa (Makira Province). A 'Sports Fishing – Recreational' licence category (SBD 6,000) exists in the 2017 fee schedule, but it is not clearly established that individual subsistence/recreational breath-hold spearfishers must hold a personal licence. The exact monetary value of a 'penalty unit' was not located. Enforcement is generally weak, especially at the local/inshore level. Confidence is high for the verbatim SCUBA and protected-species provisions (drawn from official gazetted regulation texts on FAOLEX); lower for personal-licensing and foreigner-specific procedures, which are not clearly codified at national level.

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