res : Tual letak di laut Arifuru. Laut Arifuru berbatasan dengan Papua dan 
Timor Timur. Mengingat politik perampokan rezim neo-Mojopahit dan 
begundal-begundalnya di berbagai daerah, maka rakayat di ketiga wilayah ini 
harus waspada, karena perkembangkan industri perikanan harus  berdasarkan 
sustainable poliicy. Patut diingat  kebutuhan gizi penduduk yang tergantung 
pada ikan. Semboyan pembangunan rezim kleptokrasi pada umumnya hanya 
menguntungkan kaum berkuasa dan pendukung-pendukungnya.  Sebagai tambahan 
informasi silahkan lihat kedua video di bawah ini :
http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/declining-fish + 
http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/ng-live/selbe-oceans-lecture-nglive?source=relatedvideo

http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2014/03/28/maluku-promotes-tuals-integrated-fishing-industry.html

Maluku promotes Tual's integrated fishing industry 

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Archipelago | Fri, March 28 2014, 2:02 PM
 

Maluku Governor Said Assagaff says a large-scale Maritim Timur Jaya (MTJ) 
integrated fishing industry in Tual, Maluku, has contributed greatly to the 
development of the province.

"The MTJ constitutes the largest fishing industry in Maluku and is expected to 
help improve the welfare of local people," the governor said in Tual, as quoted 
by Antara news agency.

The governor made the remarks on Tuesday as he accompanied Coordinating 
Economic Minister Hatta Rajasa on a visit to take a closer look at the industry.

He said that the MTJ, which was developed by the Artha Graha Group, will help 
the local administration realize its dream of making the province one of the 
country’s major fish producing centers.

The Maluku province and Tual City administrations, Assagaff said, will continue 
supporting improvement in the fishing industry so as to help local people, 
especially fishermen living in villages near the company.

He appreciated the company's commitment to investing a significant figure of 
more than Rp 1 trillion in the large-scale fish processing industry in Maluku.

"The MTJ can become an example and at the same time a model for other companies 
intending to invest in the fishing industry in Maluku," he said. (yln)

++++

http://edition.cnn.com/2003/TECH/science/05/14/coolsc.disappearingfish/

Study: Only 10 percent of big ocean fish remain
By Marsha Walton
CNN
Thursday, May 15, 2003 Posted: 0229 GMT (10:29 AM HKT)


      
      Industrial fishing can reduce a particular fish population to one-tenth 
its original size in only 10 or 15 years, according to scientists. 

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      Story Tools
                 
                 

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             VIDEO 
             A new report says the ocean's biggest fish species are down about 
90 percent. CNN's Kyra Phillips reports (May 14)
             
            PLAY VIDEO  

            RELATED 
             Gallery: Big fishes, dwindling numbers 


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             Interactive: More marine species at risk 
           
     
(CNN) -- A new global study concludes that 90 percent of all large fishes have 
disappeared from the world's oceans in the past half century, the devastating 
result of industrial fishing. 

The study, which took 10 years to complete and was published in the 
international journal Nature this week, paints a grim picture of the Earth's 
current populations of such species as sharks, swordfish, tuna and marlin. 

The authors used data going back 47 years from nine oceanic and four 
continental shelf systems, ranging from the tropics to the Antarctic. Whether 
off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada, or in the Gulf of Thailand, the findings 
were dire, according to the authors. 

"I think the point is there is nowhere left in the ocean not overfished," said 
Ransom Myers, a fisheries biologist at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova 
Scotia and lead author of the study. 

Some in the fishing industry took issue with the tone of the report. 

"I'm sure there are areas of the world with that level of depletion, but other 
areas are in good shape," said Lorne Clayton, with the Canadian Highly 
Migratory Species Foundation, a foundation that supports the sustainable 
development of the tuna industry. 

He said some abuses of the past have ended: Long drift nets are illegal, 
untended longlines are illegal, and many countries adhere to elaborate systems 
of licensing, quotas and third party observers working on boats. 

Yet Clayton agreed that there remains much room for improvement. 

"It's important to keep these issues in front of the public. That puts pressure 
on the fisheries and agencies to keep cleaning up their act," he said. 

According to the report, the big declines in the numbers of large fishes began 
when industrial fishing started in the early 1950s. 

"Whether it is yellowfin tuna in the tropics, bluefin in cold waters, or 
albacore tuna in between, the pattern is always the same. There is a rapid 
decline of fish numbers," Myers said. 

Co-author Boris Worm said the losses are having major impacts on the ocean 
ecosystems. 

The predatory fish are like "the lions and tigers of the sea," said Worm, a 
marine ecologist with the Institute for Marine Science in Kiel, Germany. 

"The changes that will occur due to the decline of these species are hard to 
predict and difficult to understand. However, they will occur on a global 
scale, and I think this is the real reason for concern." 

Going the way of the dinosaurs?
In many cases, the fish numbers plummeted fastest during the first years after 
fleets moved into new areas, often before anyone knew the drops were taking 
place. 

A few decades ago, longline fishing would catch about 10 big fish per 100 
hooks. Now the norm is one fish per 100, with fish about half the weight of 
earlier years, Myers said. 

Longlining, among the most widespread of fishing methods, uses miles of baited 
hooks to catch a wide range of species. 

Myers warned that the world's great fish could go the way of the dinosaurs if 
immediate action is not taken. 

                  Humans have always been very good at killing big animals.  
                  -- Ransom Myers  
           
      
"Humans have always been very good at killing big animals," Myers said. "Ten 
thousand years ago, with just some pointed sticks, humans managed to wipe out 
the woolly mammoth, saber tooth tigers, mastodons and giant vampire bats. The 
same could happen in the oceans." 

Some representatives of the fishing industry say the picture is not as bleak as 
the Nature authors indicate. 

"For tuna, the analysis is restricted to data from longline fisheries that 
catch only relatively old individuals, which comprise a small part of the 
stock," said Robin Allen, of the Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission. 

According to the commission, a greater reduction would be expected in that 
age-group compared to the tuna stock as a whole. 

Worm said he hopes this "big picture" study of the world's fish populations 
will serve as a wake up call to governments, global fishing conglomerates and 
environmental groups. 

"People haven't before seen how bad this is," said Worm. "It doesn't make any 
sense, economically or ecologically, to ignore this." 

Solutions in the water
While the numbers are alarming, Worm said there are solutions. 

In the past when certain fishing areas have been declared off limits and 
fishing restrictions have been enforced, certain fish and shellfish populations 
rebounded "amazingly quickly," he said. 

Haddock, yellowtail and scallops have recovered in different regions. 

"The ocean is full of surprises," Worm said. But with numbers down so 
dramatically in every part of the world, the situation cannot be ignored for 
long, he said. 

Myers said many of the world's fishing commissions and governments have tried 
to wish away the problem for years. Reversing the decline, he suggested, would 
require cutting back fishing by as much as 60 percent. 

Clayton said that technological advances were already responsible for 
improvements. Hi-tech equipment on fleets from many developed countries reduce 
the by-catch, the fish and other animals caught as by-products of the target 
fish. 

But a huge technological gap still exists between the fishing fleets of rich 
and poor nations, Clayton said. 

He said it makes economic sense for the fishing industry to adhere to 
conservation measures, and to look at the expansion of aquaculture (fish 
farming) as part of the answer to dwindling fish numbers. 



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