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Overfishing: Impacts, Implications, and Resolutions

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... crabs, shrimp, lobster... Reptiles- turtles. Mammals ... American shad on the East Coast. Coastal bird communities. Solutions. Marine Protected Areas ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Overfishing: Impacts, Implications, and Resolutions


1
OverfishingImpacts, Implications, and
Resolutions
  • Mike Ruhl
  • Marine Biology
  • BIOL 475G

2
What is fishing?
  • Exploitation of marine organisms for sustenance,
    profit, or pleasure.
  • Fish- cod, halibut, salmon, redfish, stripped
    bass
  • Shellfish
  • Mollusks- clams, scallops, oysters, abalone
  • Crustaceans- crabs, shrimp, lobster
  • Reptiles- turtles
  • Mammals- whales

3
Why do we fish?
  • Survival- many costal communities, particularly
    in developing countries, fish as a primary food
    source.
  • Recreation- fishing for fun.
  • Profit- commercial exploitation as a means of
    earning a livelihood.

4
Implications of Fishing
  • Sociology- in some places people need to fish to
    survive, in many others they simply want to fish
    as a mode of recreation.
  • Economics- individuals and regions can be
    dependent on fishing as a source of income.
  • Ecology- natural systems are easily disrupted by
    intense anthropogenic pressure.

5
What is overfishing?
  • Removal of organisms from the marine environment
    at a rate which cannot be sustained by natural
    recruitment and therefore
  • negatively affects interested human user groups.
  • significantly alters natural systems.

6
The Anthropocentric View
  • How can we best exploit the resource?
  • Maximum Sustained Yield (MSY)
  • How many critters can be taken each year for an
    indefinite amount of time without disrupting the
    ability of the resource to renew itself.
  • Optimum Sustained Yield (OSY)
  • How many critters can be taken and have the
    resource maintain the highest level of
    profitability.

7
Problems
  • Estimating populations
  • Estimating catch
  • Predicting population
  • change based on
  • catch.
  • environmental stochastisity.
  • limited knowledge of life history.
  • Tends to err on the side of over harvest
  • Doesnt consider ecology

8
The Ecopocentric View
  • How can we utilize the resource only to an extent
    which does not significantly alter it and the
    natural system in which it occurs.
  • Widely varying degrees of opinion.
  • Tends to err on the side of caution.

9
Problems
  • Ignores the economic aspect
  • Much less powerful legislative lobby
  • Public perception
  • Complexity of ecological
  • interactions and
  • environmental variation
  • makes prediction of trends difficult.
  • It depends.
  • The solution must lie in the between the two.

10
The Making of a Disaster
  • Collapse of the North Atlantic Cod Fishery
  • Canadian cod stock severely depleted by local and
    distant water fleets
  • Canada declared Extended Fisheries Jurisdiction
    in 1979 to control and rebuild the fishery
  • Expected a rise in Total Allowable Catch by 1985
  • Instead the fishery continued to decline and
    effectively closed in 1992

11
Why?
  • Mismanagement
  • Fishing mortality exceeded sustainable level
    estimates by 2.5X in 1985-87, 3.5X in 1988, 4.5X
    in 1989, 6.5X in 1990, and 7X in 1991
  • Stocks never achieved 50 of predicted TAC
  • Canadian fleet over harvested cod

12
How?
  • TAC calculated to /-30
  • Upper limit was used to calculate harvest quota
    every year
  • 100,000 tons example
  • When upper limit became insufficient to
    economically support fishery quota was increased
  • Short term economic gain won out biology because
    they are the more powerful lobby

13
The Irony
  • Biologists could see the catastrophe happening
    and were powerless to stop it
  • What happens when resources are managed by
    politics and not biology
  • Long term economic loss (closure of fishery) far
    outweighs short term benefit
  • Economy loses more due to mismanagement

14
Lessons Learned?
  • Good Enough is dangerous
  • Knowledge of the resource
  • Ability to control harvesting process
  • TAC should be based on lower CI, or most
    conservative estimates
  • Establishment of TAC needs to be free of
    short-term economic interest
  • Current status of the North Sea Cod Fishery

15
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16
Ecological Impacts of OF
  • Much more complicated than reduction of one
    species
  • Trophic interactions
  • Top-down and bottom-up effects
  • Salmon, killer whale, sea otter example
  • Change in community structure
  • Loss of biodiversity
  • Bycatch and habitat disturbance

17
The Terrestrial Connection
  • What happens in the sea affects the land
  • Anadromy and Catadromy
  • Many anadromous fish are or were important in
    terrestrial ecosystems
  • Salmon in the Pacific NW
  • American shad on the East Coast
  • Coastal bird communities

18
Solutions
  • Marine Protected Areas
  • Effective if
  • Large enough
  • Protect source populations
  • Effectively enforced
  • Currently well below 1 of marine systems are
    protected by MPAs
  • Valuable tool but not the silver bullet

19
Legislation, Legislators, and Lobby
  • Only real solution is through regulation
  • Effective regulation requires 3 things
  • Legislation consistent with biology
  • Competent management agencies
  • International Compliance
  • Education
  • Enforcement
  • Meaningful penalties and prosecution
  • Must make legislators see the benefit of proper
    management

20
Responsible Recreation
  • Mounting evidence suggests impacts or
    recreational angling (Science, Nov. 2004)
  • Not just commercial fishing issue
  • Attempts to conserve fisheries are met with
    opposition from both parties
  • Blame the other guy.
  • Anglers need to work for conservation not
    against it

21
Conclusions
  • Conservation of marine fisheries impacts peoples
    livelihoods, survival, and recreation.
  • It influences the marine and terrestrial
    environments.
  • It requires biologically responsible legislation
    and management.
  • It is everyone's responsibility.
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