# Analyzing and modeling public interest in fishery resources: Proposing flagship species for promoting sustainable fisheries in Japan

**Authors:** Shun Ota, Ken-ichi Hayashizaki

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0342833 · PLOS One · 2026-03-09

## TL;DR

This paper uses digital data to understand public interest in Japanese fisheries and identifies Pacific saury as a key species for promoting sustainable fishing.

## Contribution

The study introduces a data-driven method to select flagship species for marine conservation using public interest patterns.

## Key findings

- Public interest in most fish species is driven more by market prices than catch volumes.
- Pacific saury's public profile is uniquely influenced by both catch volume and awareness of its declining stock.
- Digital trace data can effectively identify flagship species for marine conservation.

## Abstract

Effective management of natural resources fundamentally relies on public support, making an understanding of the dynamics of public interest crucial for successful conservation policy. Globally, fisheries face sustainability challenges, yet public engagement often remains a key barrier to effective policy implementation. While public interest has traditionally been assessed through surveys, which are often costly and lack real-time granularity, digital trace data such as search engine queries offer a high-frequency alternative to monitor public attention. However, the primary drivers shaping public interest in specific fishery resources, and how these insights can be leveraged to select effective conservation symbols, remain poorly understood. Here we show, using Google Trends data for key Japanese fishery resources, that public interest is driven by two distinct archetypes—predictable seasonality and regional supply—and identify Pacific saury (Cololabis saira) as a unique species whose public profile is increasingly linked to its declining stock status. While previous assumptions might link consumer interest primarily to price and seasonal availability, our analysis reveals that for most species, market prices are a stronger driver than catch volumes. Crucially, Pacific saury diverges from this pattern; its public salience is uniquely influenced by both catch volume and a growing awareness of its resource depletion, making its profile more complex than that of a simple commodity. These findings demonstrate that the flagship species concept, traditionally applied to terrestrial megafauna, can be empirically adapted to exploited marine resources, providing a data-driven framework for selecting species that act as effective anchors for conservation messaging. Our methodology offers a low-cost, transferable workflow for integrating social data into resource management, a critical step for bridging the science-policy-society gap. By transforming passive digital footprints into actionable insights, this approach empowers conservation efforts to become more dynamic and responsive to public sentiment, ultimately fostering greater societal engagement in sustainability.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Cololabis saira (taxon 129043)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** infectious disease (MESH:D003141)
- **Chemicals:** sardine (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Elephantidae (elephants, family) [taxon 9780], Actinopterygii (fishes, superclass) [taxon 7898], Chionoecetes opilio (snow crab, species) [taxon 41210], Equus caballus (domestic horse, species) [taxon 9796], Sardina pilchardus (European pilchard, species) [taxon 27697], Thunnus thynnus (Atlantic bluefin tuna, species) [taxon 8237], Panthera tigris (tiger, species) [taxon 9694], Scomber japonicus (chub mackerel, species) [taxon 13676], Trachurus japonicus (Japanese horse mackerel, species) [taxon 83875], Todarodes pacificus (Japanese flying squid, species) [taxon 6637], Gadus chalcogrammus (Alaska pollock, species) [taxon 1042646], Sardinops melanosticta (species) [taxon 41697], Cololabis adocetus (saury, species) [taxon 293919], Cololabis saira (Pacific saury, species) [taxon 129043], Scomber australasicus (blue mackerel, species) [taxon 29150], Thunnus orientalis (northern bluefin tuna, species) [taxon 8238]

## Full text

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## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12970879/full.md

## References

51 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12970879/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12970879