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New Hope For Fisheries: Overfishing Reduced In Several Regions Around The World

ScienceDaily (July 31, 2009) -- Scientists have joined forces in a groundbreaking assessment on the status of marine fisheries and ecosystems. The two-year study, led by Boris Worm of Dalhousie University and Ray Hilborn of the University of Washington and including an international team of 19 co-authors, shows that steps taken to curb overfishing are beginning to succeed in five of the ten large marine ecosystems that they examined.

The paper, which appears in the July 31 issue of the journal Science, provides new hope for rebuilding troubled fisheries.

The study had two goals: to examine current trends in fish abundance and exploitation rates (the proportion of fish taken out of the sea) and to identify which tools managers have applied in their efforts to rebuild depleted fish stocks. The work is a significant leap forward because it reveals that the rate of fishing has been reduced in several regions around the world, resulting in some stock recovery. Moreover, it bolsters the case that sound management can contribute to the rebuilding of fisheries elsewhere.

It's good news for several regions in the U.S., Iceland and New Zealand. "These highly managed ecosystems are improving" says Hilborn. "Yet there is still a long way to go: of all fish stocks that we examined sixty-three percent remained below target and still needed to be rebuilt."

"Across all regions we are still seeing a troubling trend of increasing stock collapse," adds Worm. "But this paper shows that our oceans are not a lost cause. The encouraging result is that exploitation rate - the ultimate driver of depletion and collapse - is decreasing in half of the ten systems we examined in detail. This means that management in those areas is setting the stage for ecological and economic recovery. It's only a start - but it gives me hope that we have the ability to bring overfishing under control.



The fact is that what we're experiencing right now is a top-down disaster. -Paul Krugman
by dvx (dvx.clt ät gmail dotcom) on Fri Jul 31st, 2009 at 04:06:09 PM EST
[ Parent ]
I'm disappointed that this ScienceDigest article doesn't point to the actual source...it is better written than the horrible NYT piece that we saw on ET yesterday Having Fish and Eating It Too - NYTimes.com, but is still way too political and way too unspecific to be of real value.

My read of this is that some bold environmental scientist has probably worked condescendingly hard with a shill scientist from the fishing industry to extract a few concessions in a press release...at the risk of saying nearly nothing more than: There are more and bigger fishey things in the sea if we stop catching every single one of them before the mommies and daddies can make more babies...and if those babies are allowed to grow just a little bit more in time and space, they can become mommies and daddies too...if their neighborhood isn't decimated of such necessities as food to eat and places to live. Then they can buy little ponies for their babies and a whole economy can blossom without derivatives or banking scandals or bailouts of billionaires...

Sorry. My bad. None of this rapacious fishing stuff is connected with rapacious capitalism. Let them eat jellyfish.

Never underestimate their intelligence, always underestimate their knowledge.

Frank Delaney ~ Ireland

by siegestate (siegestate or beyondwarispeace.com) on Sat Aug 1st, 2009 at 04:50:36 AM EST
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