'No fish left behind' approach leaves Earth with nowhere left to fish: UBC researchers
The Earth has run out of room to expand fisheries, according to a new study led by University of British Columbia researchers that charts the systematic expansion of industrialized fisheries. In collaboration with the National Geographic Society and published today in the online journal PLoS ONE, the study is the first to measure the spatial expansion of global fisheries. It reveals that fisheries expanded at a rate of one million sq. kilometres per year from the 1950s to the end of the 1970s. The rate of expansion more than tripled in the 1980s and early 1990s – to roughly the size of Brazil's Amazon rain forest every year.
NB: View the study at http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0015143.
Between 1950 and 2005, the spatial expansion of fisheries started from the coastal waters off the North Atlantic and Northwest Pacific, reached into the high seas and southward into the Southern Hemisphere at a rate of almost one degree latitude per year. It was accompanied by a nearly five-fold increase in catch, from 19 million tonnes in 1950, to a peak of 90 million tonnes in the late 1980s, and dropping to 87 million tonnes in 2005, according to the study.
"The decline of spatial expansion since the mid-1990s is not a reflection of successful conservation efforts but rather an indication that we've simply run out of room to expand fisheries," says Wilf Swartz, a PhD student at UBC Fisheries Centre and lead author of the study.
Meanwhile, less than 0.1 per cent of the world's oceans are designated as marine reserves that are closed to fishing.
"If people in Japan, Europe, and North America find themselves wondering how the markets are still filled with seafood, it's in part because spatial expansion and trade makes up for overfishing and 'fishing down the food chain' in local waters," says Swartz.
"While many people still view fisheries as a romantic, localized activity pursued by rugged individuals, the reality is that for decades now, numerous fisheries are corporate operations that take a mostly no-fish-left-behind approach to our oceans until there's nowhere left to go," says Daniel Pauly, co-author and principal investigator of the Sea Around Us Project at UBC Fisheries Centre.
The researchers used a newly created measurement for the ecological footprint of fisheries that allows them to determine the combined impact of all marine fisheries and their rate of expansion. Known as SeafoodPrint, it quantifies the amount of "primary production" – the microscopic organisms and plants at the bottom of the marine food chain – required to produce any given amount of fish.
"This method allows us to truly gauge the impact of catching all types of fish, from large predators such as bluefin tuna to small fish such as sardines and anchovies," says Pauly. "Because not all fish are created equal and neither is their impact on the sustainability of our ocean."
"The era of great expansion has come to an end, and maintaining the current supply of wild fish sustainably is not possible," says co-author and National Geographic Ocean Fellow Enric Sala. "The sooner we come to grips with it – similar to how society has recognized the effects of climate change – the sooner we can stop the downward spiral by creating stricter fisheries regulations and more marine reserves."
Source: University of British Columbia
Related
- To manage a fishery, you must know how the fish dieMon, 10 Aug 2009, 6:28:55 EDT
- UBC researcher gives first-ever estimate of worldwide fish biomass and impact on climate changeThu, 15 Jan 2009, 14:50:03 EST
- Study: Illegal fishing harming present and future New England groundfish fisheriesThu, 4 Jun 2009, 14:37:25 EDT
- Fishing down food web leaves fewer big fish, more small fish in past century: UBC researchFri, 18 Feb 2011, 11:07:46 EST
- 'Best hope at sustainable fisheries' short-changed by conservation efforts: UBC researchersTue, 26 Aug 2008, 13:07:21 EDT
Other sources
- Study: World running out of fishing roomfrom UPIFri, 3 Dec 2010, 21:00:21 EST
- 'No fish left behind' approach leaves Earth with nowhere left to fish: UBC researchersfrom Science CentricFri, 3 Dec 2010, 13:50:24 EST
- Expansion saps world's fishing grounds: UBCfrom CBC: Technology & ScienceFri, 3 Dec 2010, 11:30:25 EST
- 'No fish left behind' approach leaves Earth with nowhere left to fish, study findsfrom Science DailyThu, 2 Dec 2010, 19:30:26 EST
- Little room left for fisheriesfrom PhysorgThu, 2 Dec 2010, 14:33:55 EST
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox! It's free!Learn more about
Check out our next project, Biology.Net
Popular science news articles
- El Niño weather and climate change threaten survival of baby leatherback sea turtles
- Deep sea animals stowaway on submarines and reach new territory
- Organic carbon from Mars, but not biological
- Researchers find a way to delay aging of stem cells
- Autopsy of a eruption: Linking crystal growth to volcano seismicity
- Good news for nanomedicine: Quantum dots appear safe in pioneering study on primates
- Taking solar technology up a notch
- El Niño weather and climate change threaten survival of baby leatherback sea turtles
- Using graphene, scientists develop a less toxic way to rust-proof steel
- Deep sea animals stowaway on submarines and reach new territory
- Good news for nanomedicine: Quantum dots appear safe in pioneering study on primates
- Pacific islands may become refuge for corals in a warming climate, study finds
- In metallic glasses, researchers find a few new atomic structures
- New graphene-based material could revolutionize electronics industry
- UCLA researchers map damaged connections in Phineas Gage's brain
- Modern dog breeds genetically disconnected from ancient ancestors
- Google goes cancer: Researchers use search engine algorithm to find cancer biomarkers
- Calcium supplements linked to significantly increased heart attack risk
- Good news for nanomedicine: Quantum dots appear safe in pioneering study on primates
- New silicon memory chip developed
- Italian merchants funded England's discovery of North America
- New graphene-based material could revolutionize electronics industry
- Babies' brains benefit from music lessons, researchers find
- Happiness model developed by MU researcher could help people go from good to great
- UCLA researchers map damaged connections in Phineas Gage's brain