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The Importance of Thinking Big:

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Was originally created for an event connected with Black History Month (February) ... Mapping the world catch, using rule-based approaches (not coloring crayons! ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Importance of Thinking Big:


1
The Importance of Thinking Big
  • Addressing large-scale and global change issues
    through marine and fisheries biological research

Daniel Pauly Fisheries Centre University of
British Columbia Vancouver, Canada
A presentation originally created for
presentation at Woods Hole, Mass., Feb. 2, 2001
2
This contribution
  • Was originally created for an event connected
    with Black History Month (February), over a year
    ago
  • Thus, it is both dated, and has a very personal
    feel
  • Nevertheless, it may appeal to Aqualink members
    in that it describes how a young scientist (yes,
    I was once young!) broadened his vision, and
    ended up leading a project (see
    www.fisheries.ubc.ca/project/saup) with a global
    scope
  • The slides have not been updated visit our web
    site for the follow up to this presentation.
  • So here we go

3
This also being a report of how one scientist
grew with age
  • The object of my first paper (1973) had a length
    of 30 cm

4
A benthos washing machine
5
This also being a report of how one scientist
grew with age
  • The object of my first paper (1973) had a length
    of 30 cm
  • The study area of my Ms thesis (1974) was a one
    km2 lagoon in Ghana, West Africa

6
On the ecology of a small West-African lagoon
7
This also being a report of how one scientist
grew with age
  • The object of my first paper (1973) had a length
    of 30 cm
  • The study area of my Ms thesis (1974) was a one
    km2 lagoon in Ghana, West Africa
  • The survey area during my first job, in
    Indonesia, (1975-1976) was 106 km2

8
The Sunda Shelf, Indonesia
9
This also being a report of how one scientist
grew with age
  • The object of my first paper (1973) had a length
    of 30 cm
  • The study area of my Ms thesis (1974) was a one
    km2 lagoon in Ghana, West Africa
  • The survey area during my first job, in
    Indonesia, (1975-1976) was 106 km2
  • And I now work on the global ocean (3.6108 km2).
  • Definitely a change of scale.

10
But why such broadening of scale?
  • In the 1970s, the idea was that the fisheries of
    developing countries should well develop, and
    then be managed using analytic models such as
    were then applied to the management of North
    Atlantic fisheries

11
Developing Fisheries in Developing Countries?
12
But why such broadening of scale?
  • In the 1970s, the idea was that the fisheries of
    developing countries should well develop, and
    then be managed using analytic models such as
    were then applied to the management of North
    Atlantic fisheries
  • Hence, one needed to know the growth and natural
    mortality of key species

13
Moreover, hundreds of species were showing up in
catches, and they could not be aged and sampled
as can be done, e.g. in New England
  • Hence the need to develop length-based method for
    the estimation of growth
  • And the need to develop a predictive model for
    estimating natural mortality from easy-to
    estimate parameters
  • And, as well, the need to ensure that available
    estimates of these parameters did not disappear
    in the gray literature.
  • These then led to the development of.

14
Electronic Length-Frequency Analysis (ELEFAN),
widely used in developing countries
(see www.fisat2000.org for updates)
15
A widely-used empirical model for estimating M
(natural mortality) from growth parameters and
mean environmental temperature
16
See www.fishbase.org to learn why
We get over 750,000 hits permonth.
17
One neat aspect of FishBase, incidentally, is
that its high quality standards generate equality
among its contributors, wherever they are from.
18
But then, all of this assumes single-species
management works.
  • Yet every species the fisheries exploit is
    embedded in an ecosystem, both as predator and
    prey,
  • and thus the mutual impacts of fisheries
    exploiting different species must be considered.
  • Hence the need for ecosystem-based management.

No fish is an island
19
Fisheries form part of complex ecosystems
20
Fortunately, the franchise for a neat ecosystem
modeling approach (Ecopath) was available.
  • And so Ecopath was made accessible ( taught) to
    a vast number of colleagues (2300 registered
    users in 120 countries, see www.ecopath.org)
  • Which resulted not only in a better understanding
    of the concept of trophic levels (TL), but also
    in many estimates of TL

21
Trophic level the concept
4
Top predators
? 10
Prey fish
3
Trophic level
? 10
Zooplankton
2
? 10
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Phytoplankton
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22
So it became possible to estimate TLs for the
worlds fisheries, using two sources of data
  • The TL for species of species groups in FishBase
  • And the global FAO database of fisheries catches.
  • The equation used TLi1 DCij? TLj for
    (groups of) species i with prey j and
  • ?TLk Yik ? TLi / Yi given catches (Y) by year
    (k)
  • simple stuff.

23
This led to two rather visible contributions on
  • Primary production required to sustain global
    fisheries (Pauly and Christensen, Nature, 1995)
  • Fishing down marine food webs (Pauly et al.,
    Science, 1998)

24
PPR to Sustain Global Fisheries
Non-tropical shelves 35
Tropical shelves 35
Rivers/ lakes 24
Terrestrial average 35-40
Open ocean 2
Coastal/reefs 8
Upwelling 25
Nature 1995, 374
25
Global fishing down the food web
Marine
Freshwater
Science March 1998, 279
26
(No Transcript)
27
And, because one shouldnt quit when on a roll,
we are working on
  • Harmonizing global ecosystem classifications, to
    accelerate the transition to ecosystem-based
    management
  • Mapping the world catch, using rule-based
    approaches (not coloring crayons!)
  • Comparing the present state of ecosystem on
    ocean-wide scale with their state 50 years ago.

28
This, for example isimportant, but lacks finesse
29
But then, catches by FAO area are not much
better..
30
Here are catches by half degree squares. Better.
31
And this will allow us to start
  • Evaluating the cost of rebuilding some or our
    depleted marine ecosystems, or of not doing so
  • Inferring where changing fisheries operations
    will conflict with conservation of biodiversity
  • Interfacing with predicted scenarios from global
    circulation models, and hence join the community
    that attempts to deal with the changes that
    global warming will cause.

32
I will stop here any more growth would be too
much
  • Thanks to Ambrose Jearld, for having me invited
    to speak here, and to all those who helped me
    have something to say Villy Christensen, Reg
    Watson and my other friends at UBC, Prof. G.
    Hempel in Germany (for supporting me as an unruly
    student), Jack Marr for hiring me as an ICLARM
    postdoc (against sound contrary advice) and all
    these wonderful colleagues on five continents
  • My recent research is supported by the Pew
    Charitable Trusts, Philadelphia, and National
    Science and Engineering Council of Canada.
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