Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
It is becoming increasingly apparent that the vast blue expanse of ocean—the last
7
frontier—is not as inexhaustible as it once seemed. While we have yet to fully explore the
8
reaches of the sea, technology has granted humans the ability to harvest its wealth. We can
9
now fish anywhere, at any depth, for any species. Like the American frontier range's bison
10
and wolf populations brought to the brink of extinction swordfish and sharks are the
11
ocean's most pursued prizes. The disadvantages associated with the depth and dimensions of
12
this open range, however, have long obscured the real consequences of fishing. Indeed,
13
scientists have the formidable challenge of assessing the status of species whose home
14
covers over 75% of the earth.
15
Three recent highly publicized papers—a trifecta detailing troubled waters—call
16
attention to overfishing's contributions to the dramatic declines in global fisheries.
17
Delving into the past, Jeremy Jackson and colleagues (2001) combined local historic records
18
with current estimates to detail the ecological impacts of overfishing, Reg Watson and
19
Daniel Pauly (2001) drew attention to distortions of global catches, and Ransom Myers and
20
Boris Worm (2003) highlighted the depletion of the majority of the largest ocean predators.
21
While some have valid criticisms of the assumptions and aggregation of historic data used
22
to assess the global situation, few disagree with the overriding conclusion that humans
23
have drastically altered not only fish biodiversity, but, increasingly, the ocean
24
itself.
25
Recent reports by the United Nation's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) which
26
maintains the world's most complete global fisheries database, appear to validate the
27
conclusions of these studies. The most recent FAO report states that 28% of global stocks
28
are significantly depleted or overexploited, and 47% are either fully exploited or meet the
29
target maximum sustainable yield. Only 24% of global stocks are either under- or moderately
30
exploited. As the sea is increasingly harvested, many ecologists wonder how the ecosystem
31
will continue to function (Jackson et al. 2001). Although economic and social
32
considerations often supercede scientific assessments, science will continuously be called
33
upon to deliver management options that will straddle the needs for conservation and
34
production, even in areas where there is only subsistence fishing (Box 1). As scientists
35
debate the details of global fisheries assessment, they are also including studies of the
36
long-term ecosystem effects and options for recovery efforts. Like was done on the open
37
range, shall we conserve or farm the sea—or both?
38
39
40
Catches, Collapses, and Controversies
41
The FAO began keeping fisheries records in 1950. Unfortunately, an enormous amount of
42
data comes directly from each country's fishing industry, which is often biased as a result
43
of unreported discarding, illegal fishing, and the misreporting of harvests. For example,
44
mid-level Chinese government officials seeking promotions systematically enhanced China's
45
fisheries numbers in recent years—which inflated and skewed international catch rates.
46
The FAO data show that catches, excluding a recent surge in anchoveta and China's
47
suspect numbers, reached a peak of 80 million metric tons in the late 1980s and have since
48
begun to decline. Regional studies validate these trends. “Most of the line fish around the
49
coast of South Africa are depleted to 5%–15% of pristine levels,” says George Branch, a
50
marine biologist from the University of Cape Town (Cape Town, South Africa). Meryl
51
Williams, Director General of WorldFish in Penang, Malaysia, notes that the Asia-specific
52
database called TrawlBase (www.worldfishcenter.org/trawl/) confirms that the region's
53
commercial species have been depleted to 10%–30% of what they were 30–40 years ago.
54
Obtaining accurate information on highly migratory species is challenging, to say the
55
least. It is not hard to imagine that data quality is the biggest disadvantage to any
56
scientific assessment. Of the 50 managed stocks in the northeast Atlantic Ocean—including
57
invertebrates, sport fishes, and major commercial finfish—data are kept on only one-fifth
58
of the species. There are 250 fish species in the region, but only 55 species are of
59
commercial interest and merit inquiry. “We know next to nothing about noncommercially
60
fished species,” notes Jeff Hutchings, a conservation biologist at Dalhousie University
61
(Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada). And that is where fisheries have adequate access to current
62
monitoring programs. “With the recent expansion of the Taiwanese and Chinese fleets, we
63
don't have the kind of sampling programs needed for those kinds of fisheries,” says Rick
64
Deriso, a fisheries scientist with the Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC) (La
65
Jolla, California, United States).
66
Couple these inadequacies with previously unknown bycatch rates (i.e., the fish caught
67
in addition to the target catch) and illegal catches, and it is easy to see that the task
68
is formidable. The FAO estimates that roughly one-quarter of the marine commercial catch
69
destined for human consumption—some 18–40 million metric tons of fish—is thrown back in the
70
sea, a harvested catch that is never utilized or counted. It is estimated that the illegal,
71
unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fisheries surpass allowed fishing quotas by 300%. IUU
72
fishers operate in areas where fishing is not permitted, use banned technologies or
73
outlawed net types, or underreport catches. “The IUU fishery for Patagonian toothfish
74
expanded rapidly in the mid-1990s, likely on the order of 20–30 vessels,” says Andrew
75
Constable, an ecological modeler at the Australian Antarctic Division (Kingston,
76
Australia), who also works with the Scientific Committee of the Commission for the
77
Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (Hobart, Australia). “These rates of IUU
78
fishing could reduce stocks to threshold levels in some areas in two to five years,” he
79
adds.
80
Often overlooked is the inescapable fact that even sustainable harvest rates reduce fish
81
populations quickly. “If the goal is a productive fishery, we're automatically talking
82
about up to a 70% decline in population across the board,” says Deriso. The FAO's Chief of
83
Marine Resource Services, Jorge Csirke, states that “from a stock point of view, there is
84
no way to preserve integrity of wild stocks and exploit them at the same time.” Indeed, the
85
United States' National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) considers optimal harvest rates to
86
be between 40%–60% of virgin levels. But once fish populations dip below the 10%–20% mark,
87
declines are of serious concern.
88
Atlantic cod in Canadian waters suffered a total population collapse and are now on
89
Canada's endangered species list (Figure 1). From 2 billion breeding individuals in the
90
1960s, Atlantic cod populations have declined by almost 90%, according to Hutchings. While
91
advisors called attention to declining cod stocks, Constable notes that by the time a
92
significant declining trend has been detected by traditional catch assessments, stocks are
93
likely to be in poor shape, if not already depleted.
94
Given the task of compiling data on only the economically important species, fisheries
95
biologists developed a single-species management approach in the 1960s, which assumed that
96
fisheries affect each species in isolation. This approach, although now rife with problems,
97
served the community and the politicians well during the decades of abundant resources.
98
“They brought the approach of single-species management to near-perfection,” says Boris
99
Worm, a marine ecologist at the Institute for Marine Science in Kiel, Germany. A growing
100
discontent with the model, in addition to greater awareness of ecological interactions,
101
however, prompted Worm and his Dalhousie University colleague Ransom Myers to question the
102
sustainability of the single-species approach. Attempting a comprehensive assessment, their
103
widely cited recent paper (Myers and Worm 2003) indicated that the global ocean has lost
104
more than 90% of large predatory fishes, such as marlin, sharks, and rays.
105
However, this new approach to assess fish stocks is not without its critics. Fisheries
106
biologists point out that the nuances of management contained in fisheries data—such as
107
altered fisher behavior, the variable “catchability” of individual species, and altered
108
gear use—were discounted in the Myers and Worm (2003) assessment and led to
109
misinterpretations for some species, notably tropical tunas (Figure 2). A number of tuna
110
biologists have expressed concern that these omissions have left the mistaken impression
111
that all tuna species are among the list of declining predators (Hampton et al 2003). Worm
112
acknowledges that his approach can be improved, but says, “The whole point of our paper was
113
to aggregate species to communities to see what the overall ecosystem is doing.”
114
115
116
Ecosystem Sustainability
117
Despite the controversy, most agree that the large predators, particularly sharks,
118
skates, rays, and marlin, are in the most dire straits. Unlike other lower-trophic order
119
species, the wholesale removal of top predators has enormous effects on the rest of the
120
ecosystem. One consequence is that overall reproduction rates can potentially suffer. Fish
121
size, gender, and age at maturity have a substantial impact on individual species'
122
reproduction rates. Since larger fish are the most susceptible to fishing, the population's
123
age structure can shift as individuals, particularly females, are fished out. For example,
124
a 23-inch (59-cm) female vermilion rockfish can produce 17 times the young of a 14-inch
125
(36-cm) fish. Given uncertainties with population dynamics, the fact that basic biological
126
data are missing makes the job even harder. While knowledge of these components is still
127
quite spotty, tuna inventories, for example, have started collecting gender data on
128
catches.
129
Daniel Pauly, a fisheries biologist at the University of Vancouver (Vancouver, British
130
Columbia, Canada), has shown that increased fishing has caused the industry to “fish down
131
the food web,” or systematically move to lower trophic levels over time as higher ones were
132
depleted (Pauly et al. 1998). The impact to ecosystems is only beginning to be uncovered.
133
“If you fish out an abundant predator, the species that it was eating or competing with
134
will increase,” says Worm. “The problem is that the ecosystem may change in such a way that
135
recovery is inhibited because a species niche space is taken or altered.”
136
Fisheries science has taken steps to increase the quality of data in recent years.
137
“Traditional fishery models assumed that a fishery was a homogenous thing—like bacteria in
138
a bottle—rather than a spatially diverse system,” says Pierre Kleiber, a fisheries
139
biologist with the Pacific Islands Fisheries Science Center of the NMFS (Honolulu, Hawaii,
140
United States). He adds that recent work accounts for spatial diversity. In addition,
141
fisheries are now dealing with the inherent uncertainty of their work and are factoring
142
that into models and decision-making. “Uncertainty didn't used to be dealt with at all in
143
formulating fishery management advice,” confirms Keith Sainsbury, a marine ecologist with
144
the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) (Clayton, South
145
Victoria, Australia), adding that its absence gave rise to an awful lot of troubles.
146
“Traditional models tended to assume perfect data with no holes in it,” says Kleiber. “Now
147
we've tried to craft a model to fit the realities of missing data.”
148
As well as incorporating spatial diversity and uncertainty, researchers are beginning to
149
comprehend the ecological damage caused by different types of fishing gear. Indeed,
150
trawling the bottom of the seafloor for groundfish can destroy a half-acre footprint of
151
habitat (Figure 3). Detailed reports document that, depending on the habitat's stability,
152
bottom trawling can not only remove fish from seafloor habitats, but alter bottom relief
153
such that it compromises the ability of other fish to survive (NRC, 1002). In Australia,
154
for example, lingcod rely on undisturbed bottom relief to lay their eggs, while other
155
groundfish species depend on complex seafloor habitats for the majority of their food.
156
“Science is getting more realistic, but it is getting more difficult,” says Branch.
157
Ecological models are far more complex than traditional fisheries models, says Csirke,
158
adding that more model variables make it more difficult to apply to fisheries, an industry
159
whose focus is, understandably, not conservation. Despite its incorporation into national
160
fisheries policies, ecosystem-based management remains a loosely defined term. It is not a
161
well-defined concept because it is not possible to optimize every species, says Deriso.
162
An additional concern to scientists is that of biomass resilience in the face of
163
environmental changes. Francisco Chavez, a biologist with the Monterey Bay Aquarium
164
Research Institute (Moss Landing, California, United States), recently demonstrated that
165
over a 25-year period, warmer and cooler Pacific waters tilt the distribution of anchoveta
166
versus sardines, both open-ocean dwellers (Chavez et al. 2003). Indeed, El Niño influenced
167
the crash of the heavily fished Peruvian anchoveta industry in the late 1970s. These
168
examples illustrate how susceptible fisheries are to environmental fluctuations. When the
169
biomass of a population is reduced, it is much more sensitive to environmental change. We
170
do not know how environmental fluctuations like these will affect the natural production of
171
young fish, says Kleiber, expressing the concern that without a better understanding of
172
climate, fisheries scientists end up trying to estimate moving targets.
173
In the end, many scientists have their doubts about the influence of science on
174
decision-making. “My personal view is that it's naïve to think that modifying and improving
175
models will necessarily lead to improved natural resource management,” says Simon Jennings,
176
a fisheries biologist with the United Kingdom's Centre for Environment, Fisheries and
177
Aquaculture Science in Lowestoft. Indeed, the International Council for the Exploration of
178
the Seas (Copenhagen, Denmark) recently recommended a total ban on North Sea and Irish Sea
179
cod stocks, based on single-species assessment. Although the more intensive ecosystem-based
180
models could not have produced a more stringent recommendation, politicians allowed
181
harvests at roughly half of last year's catch.
182
183
184
To Conserve or to Farm?
185
While lowering fisheries' effort seems the most logical approach to the recovery of
186
depleted fisheries, social and economic concerns often stymie political action. Yet demand
187
for seafood continues. Therefore, scientists also are investigating both conservation and
188
alternative production options.
189
Given the social, economic, and political problems associated with that, managers have
190
often used closures to help a hard-hit species recover. In many cases, however, the
191
recovery time for exploited species is longer than once thought (Hutchings 2000). “Based on
192
the available information, it is not unusual for fish populations to show no or little
193
recovery even after 15 years,” says Hutchings. “All else being equal, we predict the
194
earlier the age of maturity, the faster the rate of recovery,” he adds. And that depends on
195
environmental conditions as well. “In the case of Antarctic species, some overexploited
196
populations remain at less than 5% pre-exploitation abundance after 30 years,” says
197
Constable.
198
One management strategy to recover species is to create marine protected areas (MPAs),
199
zones that restrict all removal of marine life (Box 2). A number of marine ecologists are
200
staunch supporters of MPAs for both conservation and fishery's recovery. What looked like
201
sustainability in the past were fisheries out of our reach—naturally protected areas—says
202
Pauly, adding that our increasing ability to harvest fisheries necessitates the creation of
203
MPAs now. In theory, these areas are refugia for fishes to reproduce, spilling over not
204
only healthy adults but also potentially transporting thousands of viable young—seeding
205
surrounding waters. To date, less than 1% of the ocean's area is protected, which hinders
206
the ability to conclusively determine if spillover rates have the predicted impact on
207
fishery's recovery.
208
A review of 89 studies of MPAs by Ben Halpern, a student at the University of
209
California, Santa Barbara (Santa Barbara, California, United States), demonstrated that the
210
average number of fish inside a reserve increases between 60%– and 150% (Halpern 2003). In
211
addition, 59% of the sites had increased diversity. While the numbers inside the reserves
212
look good, the crucial condition of larval spillover has yet to be proven. Most scientists
213
involved in the debate agree that MPAs should be one component in an overall management
214
scheme, but worry that until the crucial element of fishing effort is resolved, MPAs may
215
just displace the vast industrial fleets.
216
In terms of simply producing fish for global food needs, aquaculture (also known as fish
217
farming) is another, increasingly popular, option. In 2001, the European Union produced 17%
218
of total fishery's production via aquaculture. These numbers are projected to steadily
219
increase, but some question whether aquaculture would be sufficient to supply what has been
220
lost by overexploited fisheries.
221
Concentrated in coastal areas, aquaculture has aroused numerous concerns. Indeed, in
222
developed countries, most operations grow carnivorous fish, which necessitates growing fish
223
to feed fish. While the process has become more efficient in recent years, due in part to a
224
growing reliance on vegetarian diets, it still takes about 3 pounds (1.36 kg) of fish to
225
create 2.2 pounds (1 kg) of desirable meat (Aldhous 2004). Yet, the total catch of food
226
fish continues to grow, as do concerns about nutrient runoff and estuary pollution
227
resulting from aquaculture. Increasingly, coastal residents often complain about the
228
aesthetics of such activities, and there is also new research that indicates that
229
farm-raised fish harbor more cancer-causing pollutants than wild species (Hites et al.
230
2004).
231
To alleviate many of these concerns, open-ocean aquaculture is now being considered.
232
Indeed, the NMFS is set to propose a Code of Conduct for Offshore Aquaculture, which would
233
open up the 200-mile (322-km) United States Exclusive Economic Zone to net pens seaward of
234
coastal state boundaries and authorities. The Sea Grant program in conjunction with
235
interested business, is also currently assessing the carrying capacity of open-water pens
236
as well as their potential environmental impact. Given increased industrial interest and
237
unchanging demand for seafood, many think farming the sea may be around the corner.
238
Undoubtedly, scientific effort will continue to inform both conservationists and
239
industry about fisheries' capacity and potential recovery options. As attitudes towards
240
fisheries continue to change, increased understanding of the ecological underpinnings
241
should help strike a more informed balance between fisheries' conservation and production.
242
“The big mistake is suggesting that you can manage fish stocks,” says Niels Daan, a
243
biologist with the Netherlands Institute for Fisheries Research (IJmuiden, The
244
Netherlands). “In my opinion, we can only manage human activity.”
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252