     
Impacts of Capture fishing
There is no doubt that humans have severely damaged the Earths's fish
resources, although there is no consensus about the true extent of the damage.
Determining the number of fish in the oceans, their ability to withstand
fishing pressures and ecological damages is extremely difficult. To complicate
matters, fishing is not the only factor that affects the marine environment,
other factors including pollution, habitat destruction, and environmental
changes affect the marine ecosystem.
There are currently over 37,000 industrial
trawlers and 12 million small fishing boats fishing the world's oceans in
a $70 billion dollar-a-year industry. Over 100 million tons of fish are
harvested annually. Unfortunately, most scientists, and even fishermen agree
that such levels of production are not sustainable. There are approximately
200 fish stocks being harvested globally and only 75 of those are not being
fished at or above sustainable levels. Of those 200 global fish stocks,
about 50 are overfished, while about another 75 are fully utilized (Science
News June 8, 1996). Maintaining current levels of production is likely to
become more and more difficult with an increasing amount of the burden being
placed on fish farming. More research is needed on how to manage large fish
farming operations and over-exploited stocks.
Almost every expert agrees that the oceans are overfished and many fish
stocks are in danger. However, this threat is barely visible to the average
consumer. Fish meat still lines the supermarket shelves and prices have
not skyrocketed. What most consumers don't know is that most of types of
fish on the supermarket shelves are not the same kind of fish that was on
those same shelves ten years ago. Today's fish is the "trash"
fish of decades past. Often, these "trash" fish were simply thrown
overboard to make room for more "valuable" fish. However, much
of the "valuable" fish stocks have disappeared, and yesterday's
trash fish have become today's goods.
Many of the new fish on the
market come from lower trophic levels in the marine food web. The trophic
level indicates where the organism is in the food web. Primary producers
such as seaweed, and other photosynthetic organisms are on the first trophic
level. Organisms that consume the primary consumers belong to the second
trophic level; organisms that eat second trophic level organisms are considered
to be third trophic level. Each trophic level has approximately 10 times
more biomass than the trophic level directly above it. Thus, there are more
fish at lower trophic levels than higher ones. However, lower trophic level
fish tend to be smaller. Humans tend to prefer fish at higher trophic levels,
typically between 3 and 4. The top of the marine food web, the killer whale
and shark, belong to the 5th trophic level. In the past several hundred
years, human activity has decimated the higher trophic levels of fish, and
is now beginning to decimate the lower levels. Human fishing is slowly dismantling
the ecological system that has been developing for millions of years.
Attacks on the marine ecosystem have not been limited to the higher trophic
levels. Scientists believe that certain fishing techniques are capable of
destroying entire ecosystems, starting with the first trophic level. There
is still insufficient evidence indicating how widespread the damage is or
if it is even significant. One such potentially devastating technique is
trawling. The trawl works by dragging along the oceans bottom and scooping
up everything in its path, leaving a swath of devastation behind it. Scientists
fear that by destroying the ecosystem on the ocean floor fishermen are destroying
a vital link in the marine ecosystem, the lower trophic levels along with
the habitat for species of higher trophic levels. No one knows how long
it takes for the ecosystem to recover, or even if the trawlers have the
effect some scientists fear it has, but most experts agree that trawling
in shallow waters is less devastating to the local ecosystem as it more
easily recovers because of natural disturbances such as tidal flow and storms.
The cause of these problems are, too many fishermen, to great a demand,
for not enough fish. At present it appears that the only sustainable option
is to drastically reduce fishing to let stocks recover, before resuming
at sustainable levels. The sustainable option is not an easy one, because
a carrying capacity of each fishery must be determined, and such levels
may not be commercially sustainable.
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