[Mb-civic] No Fish Story - Editorial - Washington Post
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Sat Aug 13 05:40:59 PDT 2005
No Fish Story
Saturday, August 13, 2005; Page A20
THE DIRE ECOLOGICAL condition of the world's oceans -- and the role that
overfishing plays in their degradation -- has been the subject of
numerous studies and blue-ribbon commissions. The message is clear: The
oceans are far more fragile ecosystems than people have believed, and
only dramatic changes in human interaction with them can prevent
irreversible degradation. A recent study of big-fish diversity worldwide
is the latest to reinforce this depressing conclusion.
<>The study, released recently by Science magazine, examined the
diversity of big predator fish species caught by Japanese fishing boats
over the past five decades. An international team of scientists led by
biologists Boris Worm and Ransom A. Myers at Dalhousie University in
Nova Scotia studied records of the Japanese catch on what are called
long lines -- that is, fishing lines stretching many miles and baited
with multiple hooks. They corroborated these records with other sources,
and they show that certain areas of the oceans -- generally temperate
regions -- form particular "hot spots" of marine life. Yet as industrial
fishing ramped up in the second half of the 20th century, these hot
spots became much cooler, barely hotter, in fact, than the rest of the
oceans. As the total catch of tuna, billfish and other big predator fish
exploded over the past few decades, the diversity of species caught in
any given area -- that is, the number of species caught on a given
number of hooks -- plummeted by as much as 50 percent. While climate and
other factors play a role, the authors wrote that they "could not
identify a factor other than fishing that may plausibly explain
long-term, global-scale declines."
These results are particularly disturbing because they deal with the
open ocean, not with coastal waters, where depletion of fish species was
already well established. A decline of species diversity could make
oceanic ecosystems more vulnerable to climate change and other
environmental shifts.
The good news in the study is that a few hot spots remain -- though they
are dramatically less vibrant than they were. One of these is off the
southeastern coast of the United States. Another is south of Hawaii.
These areas desperately need protection. More broadly, commercial
fishing needs to be brought down to levels that will be, in the
long-term, sustainable and will permit whatever recovery of species
diversity is still possible.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/08/12/AR2005081201448.html?nav=hcmodule
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