http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2009\09\21\story_21-9-2009_pg3_4

ENVIRONMENT: Don't kill the oceans -Alex David Rogers



We have to change completely the approach to ocean management. It is possible, 
through technical measures to reduce by-catch in many fisheries and through 
careful consideration to avoid management measures that encourage discarding of 
unwanted or low-value catch



When I was a boy I saw the waves of the Atlantic Ocean turn mercury-silver and 
the water boil as mackerel herded bait fish into a small bay and onto a beach 
on the west coast of Ireland. It is a picture of a bountiful ocean that has 
remained with me to this day. The oceans provide 2.9 billion people with at 
least 15 percent of their annual protein requirement and more than 100 million 
people are involved in the fishing industry with more than half a billion 
dependent on the sector. Annual global fish trade is worth $92 billion and the 
seafood industry as a whole probably more than $200 billion. Fishing is a 
lucrative business as well as a critical food security and livelihood issue, 
especially in the developing world.

Yet all is not well in the oceans, the largest ecosystem on the planet Earth, 
and reversing the worrisome developments threatening to empty the oceans will 
require a concerted, global effort.

After the Second World War there was a massive expansion in fishing as the 
distant-water fleets of the industrialised nations cast their nets and lines 
across the oceans. Acoustic and navigation technologies allowed us to find fish 
wherever they are, and to catch them in increasing quantities by deploying 
greater numbers of more powerful and larger fishing vessels with more and more 
sophisticated fishing gear. The result of this was that in the 1980s marine 
fish catches began to stagnate and are now in decline. Many iconic and 
economically important fisheries, such as the north-western Atlantic cod, have 
been lost. The large predators of the oceans - tuna, billfish and sharks - are 
simply disappearing with populations falling to 10 percent or less of their 
unfished abundance. For some of these species extinction is a real prospect.

What has gone wrong and can it be fixed?

Depletion of fish stocks has been driven by open access to fisheries, 
encouraging a damaging "race to fish" amongst fishers, as well as massive 
overcapacity in fishing fleets. Thanks to government subsidies, fishers 
continue to exploit depleted or unproductive stocks. Each year governments 
spend about $20 billion on harmful fishing subsidies. Global fleet capacity too 
has grown to about twice that required to harvest current fish stocks, 
undermining efforts to sustainably manage fisheries.

Efforts to reduce global fishing fleets are often met with fierce opposition 
from fishers and supportive politicians. Using short term socioeconomic 
justifications, politicians have set fishing quotas way above those recommended 
by scientists. In Europe, quotas have been 42-57 percent higher than scientific 
recommendations and as a result 80 percent of European fish stocks are fished 
beyond sustainable levels compared to an average of 25 percent globally.

To exacerbate the situation 11-26 million tonnes of fish, worth $10 billion to 
$23 billion per year are caught illegally. Parts of the developing world, with 
poor capacity to manage fisheries, such as east and west Africa are 
particularly hard hit by this piracy. In some cases, such as in the blue fin 
tuna fishery in the Mediterranean, blatantly illegal fishing and overfishing 
practices are encouraged by the extraordinary prices that some fish can fetch. 
Single blue fin tuna have been reported to have been sold in sushi-loving Japan 
for more than $100,000.

Worryingly, fishing has other effects on marine ecosystems. Overexploitation of 
target fish stocks changes the structure of marine 'food-webs' and the 
ecosystem of which they form a part. In the worst cases, overfishing can 
interact with other human interference, exacerbating climate change effects. 
Overfishing of grazing fish such as parrotfish and surgeonfish from coral reefs 
decreases the resistance of the reefs to the effects of mass coral bleaching, 
which has been happening as a result of increasing sea surface temperatures 
since the late 1970s. In coastal waters off the United States and in areas such 
as the Black Sea, outbreaks of invasive jellyfish and the development of dead 
zones, areas of the sea where a lack of oxygen kills almost everything, can be 
related to the combined effects of overfishing, pollution from agricultural 
run-off, shipping and climate change.

By-catch - the amount of unmanaged and wasted catch by fishing trawlers, 
another effect of over-fishing - is estimated at a staggering 38.5 million 
tonnes, about 40 percent of marine fish catches. By-catch includes many iconic 
marine predators, such as oceanic seabirds and sharks and has reached levels 
that threaten these species with extinction. The impact of bottom fishing gear 
on seabed communities of ancient corals, sponges and other species has become a 
major global concern, especially in the deep ocean where such animals may live 
for 4000 years and have little chance of recovering from fishing impacts.

Given the critical importance to future generations of the oceans for food 
security and the other services they provide, such as regulating the climate 
and the Earth's major nutrient cycles, we must change the way we manage 
fisheries. It may come as a surprise, but we already know how to do this. One 
way to improve the sustainability of fisheries is to give ownership of the 
resource to the fishers. This is not a new idea and has been practiced since 
ancient times in the western Pacific where fisheries were managed through 
territorial use rights or customary marine tenure.

Fishers are allocated a set proportion of the total allowable catch (TAC) and 
these quotas may be transferable (sold onto other fishers) or non-transferable. 
Such systems tend to reduce fleet overcapacity and make fisheries more 
economic, reducing the need for subsidies. Because they secure harvesting 
rights to fishers they also encourage long-term stewardship of marine resources 
and greater cooperation between fishers and fisheries managers.

Governance of fisheries must improve globally through the strengthening of 
international law and the improvement of the performance of states and regional 
fisheries management organisations (RFMOs) charged with managing fisheries. 
Managers must have a comprehensive understanding of what fish are being caught 
and are being discarded; the ecosystem impacts of such fishing activities and 
politicians must follow scientific advice on catch limits to sustain fisheries 
over the longer term. These are obligations under international law and are 
simply not being met. Recent news that the FAO has successfully negotiated a 
new international agreement on port state measures to combat landings of 
illegally caught fish is welcome. However, tackling illegal, unreported and 
unregulated (IUU) fishing will require further efforts.

Finally, we have to change completely the approach to ocean management. It is 
possible, through technical measures to reduce by-catch in many fisheries and 
through careful consideration to avoid management measures that encourage 
discarding of unwanted or low-value catch. However, the adoption of marine 
protected areas on a large scale across the oceans offers the greatest 
opportunity not only to improve fisheries, but also to maintain the species 
diversity and function of marine ecosystems and prevent the catastrophic 
collapses like the disappearing Atlantic cod that we are witnessing.

Studies have demonstrated that such protected areas rapidly lead to the 
recovery of fish populations and increased survivability of fish to a large 
size. The improved reproductive capacity of such populations soon leads to an 
"overspill" effect whereby fish stocks outside of the protected zones increase, 
benefiting fishers by increasing catches. The benefits to the marine 
environment are profound with recovery of seabed habitats from the impacts of 
bottom fishing and increased abundance and diversity of marine species. Such 
effects have been seen in marine reserves from the tropics, for example in St 
Lucia, and in temperate regions, such as George's Bank in the Gulf of Maine.

Life began in the oceans and it behoves us to do our best to protect the 
life-sustaining oceans and their riches. -Yale Global

Dr Alex David Rogers is Reader and Scientific Director of the International 
Programme on the State of the Ocean


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