CHAPTER 16 FISHERIES AND AGRICULTUIRE FISH IN A WAREHOUSE?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity
Advertisements

Post Reading Discussion: Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11 (Miller and Spoolman, 2009)
Water Use.
Human Impact in Aquatic Systems: Fish Catching vs. Fish Raising.
200 pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200 pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200 pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt 100 pt 200 pt 300 pt 400 pt 500 pt Double Jeopardy 100.
Marine Fisheries Terms to Know Fishery – Refers to aspects of harvesting and managing aquatic organisms. Can refer specifically to a species being harvested,
Fishing: An Industry at the Crossroads. Canadian Fisheries Canada’s fishing industry had a bright future up to the 1980’s The fishing industry looked.
Narrated by your classmates 
FISHERIES IN BC. HISTORY - Thousands of years ago, the native peoples of BC were fishing with nets and spears -After settlers came, they made homes and.
Marine Biodiversity and Fisheries Management November 29 th, 2006 For section this week: look at last year’s final exam and Valuation homework (both are.
Marine Pollution. Marine pollution threatens resources Even into the mid-20th century, coastal U.S. cities dumped trash and untreated sewage along their.
Natural Resource: Fishing. East Coast Fishery Fisherman noticed they were catching fewer and smaller fish. The Canadian government responded in 1992 by.
- What is the future of fishing and why is this the case? - Why is this especially important for New England? - What is currently being done about this?
Fisheries and Fishing Techniques. What are fisheries? A fishing ground for commercial fishing.
Catch of the Day: The State of Global Fisheries
A Brief History of Fishing Back in 1497, when John Cabot arrived on the Eastern Coast of North America there were a lot of fish! Since the 1400’s, Europeans.
Fishery Fishing makes its greatest contribution to the economy when it is harvested as a food source. This is the commercial fishery.
Fishy Business -Anouk Ride Jackie Mills GGS-12 Mrs. Aliphat.
“If you're overfishing at the top of the food chain, and acidifying the ocean at the bottom, you're creating a squeeze that could conceivably collapse.
See? Food!.
Fisheries and Fishing Techniques. Overfishing What is overfishing? What leads to overfishing?
Sustaining Fisheries and Catching Fish
Overfishing and Extinction: Gone Fishing, Fish Gone (1) Fishery: concentration of a particular wild aquatic species suitable for commercial harvesting.
Fish Farming: Intro to Aquaculture
Fishery Biology. Fisheries Management n Provide people with a sustained, high, and ever-increasing benefit from their use of aquatic resources n Problems.
Fish Resource Management About 80% of fish harvested come from oceans. Why is this obvious?  Most of the world’s water is ocean, therefore it would.
Humans and the Sea -- Fisheries, management, and sampling Millions of people depend on fisheries… in what ways? –Food 86 million tons/year –Jobs –Products.
HAPPY FISHING LAB THE TRAGEDY OF THE COMMONS. THIS IS NOT A NEW CONCEPT 529AD, Codex Justinianus Justinian Code), Book II, Part III. The Division of Things:
Fishing = Harvesting = Predation Predator-Prey Interaction +- with Humans as Predator Very high-tech hunting- gathering –Fast boats –Sonar, fish finders.
Humans and the Sea -- Fisheries, management, and sampling
Fisheries Prepared by - Ms. Uttara Abhyankar
Fisheries in the Seas Fish life cycles: Egg/sperm pelagic larvaejuvenile (first non-feeding – critical period – then feeding) (first non-feeding – critical.
The Impacts of the Fishing Industry and Its Sustainability Alexa English, Luc Richard.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Emptying the Oceans : The state of ocean fisheries Marine protected areas and reserves.
Oceans 11. What is “fishing”? Exploitation of marine organisms for sustenance, profit, or fun. Examples: –Fish- cod, halibut, salmon, redfish, stripped.
Jurisdiction Marine Pollution International Fishing.
By Jordan Greenberg and Jeremy Berkowitz
Fisheries and Aquaculture Management Lecture 1: Introduction to Fisheries Resources.
Human impacts on Aquatic Biodiversity… Our large aquatic footprint.
Human impacts on Aquatic Biodiversity… Our large aquatic footprint.
Narrated by your classmates. Emptying the Oceans Describe why the old cliché that “there are always more fish in the sea is misleading” Define the terms:
Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity. Questions for Today  What are the major threats to aquatic biodiversity (HIPPCO)?  How can we protect and sustain marine.
Why do we fish? Survival- many costal communities, particularly in developing countries, fish as a primary food source. Recreation- fishing for fun.
“If you're overfishing at the top of the food chain, and acidifying the ocean at the bottom, you're creating a squeeze that could conceivably collapse.
Chapter 3.2 Forests and Fisheries. Pre-Chapter Activity What happened to the Tuna?
Georges Bank East Scotian Shelf Grand Banks.
Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity
Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter What Are the Major Threats to Aquatic Biodiversity?  Concept 11-1 Aquatic species are threatened by.
December 3, Fisheries & Marine Reserves. 1. Problems with fisheries. 2. Video on fisheries in New England. 3. Marine reserves - pros and cons.
Marine Reserves 12/15/08. Laws protecting marine biodiversity 1975 Convention of International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) 1979 Global Treaty.
Over-fishing. What is it? Over-fishing occurs when the catch is at a rate greater than natural reproduction can sustain. Worldwide, we are removing 180.
 Fishing.  Canada’s oldest industry  We have the longest coastline in the world  We have more lakes than the rest of the world combined (60% of all.
Class The Oceans FOOD RESOURCES OF THE OCEANS World Fish Catch Dynamics of fish populations and fishing Over-exploited fisheries Management to get.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 13 Biological Productivity and Energy Transfer Issues That Affect Marine Fisheries.
Geometric Population Growth in Discrete Time
Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity
Fishing and Aquaculture
Marine Resources: Fisheries Management
Topic 4.3: Aquatic food production systems
Fishing and Aquaculture
What Are the Major Threats to Aquatic Biodiversity?
Fishing and Aquaculture
Fishing and Aquaculture
Fishing Resources.
Fishing and Aquaculture
Fishing and Aquaculture
Fishing and Aquaculture
Fishing at a Crossroads Text Answers
11-3 How Should We Manage and Sustain Marine Fisheries?
FISH IN A WAREHOUSE? CHAPTER 14 FISHERIES AND AQUACULTURE
Presentation transcript:

CHAPTER 16 FISHERIES AND AGRICULTUIRE FISH IN A WAREHOUSE? How one Baltimore fish scientist could change the way we eat

16 FISH IN A WAREHOUSE? Learning Outcomes How one Baltimore fish scientist could change the way we eat At the end of this chapter you will know: The pros, cons, and importance to human of fish and fish hatcheries. The history and status of declining fish hatcheries. How the “Tragedy of the Commons” has jeopardized global fish takings. How we can protect fish hatcheries Learning Outcomes

16 FISH IN A WAREHOUSE? Main Concept How one Baltimore fish scientist could change the way we eat Despite the vastness of our oceans, fisheries are in jeopardy. Aquaculture may offer part of a solution. Main Concept Case: Huge fisheries supported towns all along the northeastern coast of North America until the early 1990s. As a result of over-fishing and using unsustainable practices, the fisheries collapsed and have yet to recover—even after a 30-year ban on fishing. In an effort to bring the industry back, fishermen are becoming fish farmers. 3

16 FISH IN A WAREHOUSE? How one Baltimore fish scientist could change the way we eat Case: Huge fisheries supported towns all along the northeastern coast of North America until the early 1990s. As a result of over-fishing and using unsustainable practices, the fisheries collapsed and have yet to recover—even after a 30-year ban on fishing. In an effort to bring the industry back, fishermen are becoming fish farmers. Cod inhabit cold coastal waters in the North Atlantic. They live approximately 200m deep near the ocean floor and depend on protection from a diverse community and complex structure. Through trawler fishing, their habitat became so severely degraded that the populations crashed. 4

16 FISH IN A WAREHOUSE? How one Baltimore fish scientist could change the way we eat The fish industry has declined throughout the Atlantic range, especially in the Grand Banks of the Newfoundland–Labrador Shelf region. Adult cod can be more than six feet long and weigh 200 pounds or more. Spawning schools have been recorded at more than 100 million fish and the average female can spawn millions of eggs. 5

16 How one Baltimore fish scientist could change the way we eat When large nets are dragged behind trawler ships, the result is capture of target and non-target species. Capture of non-target species has threatened many species, including sea turtles, birds, seals, sea lions, and otters. Bottom trawlers are also devastating the sea floor—destroying habitat for coral, sponges, starfish, and other invertebrates. 6

16 How one Baltimore fish scientist could change the way we eat When large nets are dragged behind trawler ships, the result is capture of target and non-target species. Capture of non-target species has threatened many species, including sea turtles, birds, seals, sea lions, and otters. Bottom trawlers are also devastating the sea floor—destroying habitat for coral, sponges, starfish, and other invertebrates. 7

16 Humans rely on protein from fish TERMS TO KNOW: Bycatch Humans consume more seafood every year than beef, pork, and chicken combined. TERMS TO KNOW: Bycatch Maximum sustainable yield Overexploited fisheries Depleted fisheries Wealthy countries take advantage of the health benefits while poorer nations get an inexpensive source of protein. More than 200 million people make their livings in the fishing industry, which generates about $130 billion annually. 8

16 Humans rely on protein from fish TERMS TO KNOW: Maximum sustainable yield Overexploited fisheries Depleted fisheries “Fishing down the food chain” reduces apex predators like cod and tuna, leaving the lower-trophic-level species unchecked and in competition with the young of more desirable species. Unbalanced food webs may be irreversibly changing the ocean ecosystem. Loss of the high-order predators is especially disruptive. 9

16 Humans rely on protein from fish TERMS TO KNOW: Maximum sustainable yield Overexploited fisheries Depleted fisheries The Marine Trophic Index (MTI) is a measure of the average trophic level (TL) of fish taken in a given year and is an indicator of the status of marine ecosystems. One obstacle to recovery of cod and other large predatory fish is the loss of their own prey. When cod are depleted, fishers pursue the herring, crabs, and other low-order species, reducing the cod’s food supply. 10

16 Humans rely on protein from fish TERMS TO KNOW: Maximum sustainable yield Overexploited fisheries Depleted fisheries The Marine Trophic Index (MTI) is a measure of the average trophic level (TL) of fish taken in a given year and is an indicator of the status of marine ecosystems. One obstacle to recovery of cod and other large predatory fish is the loss of their own prey. When cod are depleted, fishers pursue the herring, crabs, and other low order species, reducing the cod’s food supply. 11

16 Humans rely on protein from fish TERMS TO KNOW: Maximum sustainable yield Overexploited fisheries Depleted fisheries More than half the world’s fisheries are at their maximum sustainable yield—fully exploited, the amount that can be harvested without decreasing the yield in future years. Another 30% are overexploited or depleted, meaning there are not enough fish left to support a fishery. One obstacle to recovery of cod and other large predatory fish is the loss of their own prey. When cod are depleted, fishers pursue the herring, crabs, and other low-order species, reducing the cod’s food supply. 12

16 Humans rely on protein from fish Fish catches in the Newfoundland-Labrador Shelf area of the North Atlantic show a distinct shift in the species and amounts taken over the years. Fishery managers called for a 50% reduction in allowable catch of cod in 1988, but political officials only reduced the amount by 10%. The cod fishery was closed in 1992. 13

16 Humans rely on protein from fish Though 68% of global marine fisheries are sustainably fished, the percentage that is overfished (31%) has increased threefold since the 1970s and is a major concern for fishers and fishery managers. 14

16 Laws exist to protect and manage fisheries TERMS TO KNOW: Exclusive economic zone (EEZs) Marine protected areas (MPAS) Marine reserves Lawmakers and scientists around the world are struggling to undo the damage that’s been done to our oceans and fisheries. Laws were not in place to limit the reach of fishing vessels beyond the 12-mile mark, nor were there rules about how long a vessel could stay in any one spot or how much they could take. No fishery could withstand this kind of stress. Marine protected areas (MPAs) provide varying degrees of protection for different species, depending on the area and need. Exclusive economic zones (EEZs) extend 200 nautical miles from the coastline of any given nation, giving that nation exclusive rights over marine resources. 15

16 Laws exist to protect and manage fisheries TERMS TO KNOW: Exclusive economic zone (EEZs) Marine protected areas (MPAS) Marine reserves In addition to the MPAs and EEZs, the country with rights to the fishery also has strictly enforced limits as to the amount of fish they can take. Once the vessel has reached the catch limit, it is done for the season. Some MPAs are considered marine reserves and are “no take” zones— absolutely nothing can be disturbed by human hands in these areas. Marine protected areas (MPAs) provide varying degrees of protection for different species, depending on the area and need. Exclusive economic zones (EEZs) extend 200 nautical miles from the coastline of any given nation, giving that nation exclusive rights over marine resources. 16

16 Laws exist to protect and manage fisheries TERMS TO KNOW: Exclusive economic zone (EEZs) Marine protected areas (MPAS) Marine reserves Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act (1976) Primary law governing marine fisheries in U.S. federal waters. Amended in 1996 to focus on rebuilding fisheries, protecting ecosystems, and reducing bycatch. Amended in 2006 to add market-based programs like cap-and-trade. Marine protected areas (MPAs) provide varying degrees of protection for different species, depending on the area and need. Exclusive economic zones (EEZs) extend 200 nautical miles from the coastline of any given nation, giving that nation exclusive rights over marine resources. 17

16 Scientists study the possibility of growing marine fish indoors Center of Marine Biotechnology (COMB) at the University of Maryland Using a recirculating aquaculture system (RAS) to raise Mediterranean bass from eggs to table. Using examples of generations-old, small-scale fish farms and freshwater fish farms, Dr. Zohar is attempting to grow marine fish at levels with the potential to serve cities rather than families. Dr. Yonathon Zohar at COMB in Baltimore 18

16 Scientists study the possibility of growing marine fish indoors TERMS TO KNOW: Sustainable fishery aquaculture Sea bream fish farm, Shikoku, Japan 19

16 Scientists study the possibility of growing marine fish indoors In 2009, more than half of the global fish landings were being produced through aquaculture. China produces over 60% of the farmed fish. Problems are inevitable—depletion of feeder fish from the wild, clearing tropical mangrove forests to make room for shrimp ponds. Sea bream fish farm, Shikoku, Japan 20

16 Aquaculture presents environmental challenges Problems and possible solutions for net pen and aquaculture The aquapod is a submersible net pen for open-ocean aquaculture. Aquapods are designed to be located away from the marine coast to reduce environmental impact and optimize growing conditions for fish.

16 Aquaculture presents environmental challenges Problems and possible solutions for net pen and aquaculture The Aquapod is a submersible net pen for open ocean aquaculture. Aquapods are designed to be located away from the marine coast to reduce environmental impact and optimize growing conditions for fish.

16 Aquaculture presents environmental challenges Problems and possible solutions for net pen and aquaculture The Aquapod is a submersible net pen for open ocean aquaculture. Aquapods are designed to be located away from the marine coast to reduce environmental impact and optimize growing conditions for fish.

16 Indoor fish farming may provide a solution Seawater is created in the lab from tap water to which a precise mix of salts and trace elements has been added. Each critical factor in the gigantic swimming pool ocean—temperature, salinity, pH, CO2, and oxygen concentrations can all be controlled through a series of computers, pipes, and hoses. Feed conversion is higher, and bacteria are being used to help process waste products into fuel-grade methane. Microbes in the RAS manage the waste in the water.

16 Indoor fish farming may provide a solution Today, 85% of the fish consumed in the United State are imported from great distances. Not only does that mean the fish are less fresh, but also that fossil fuels are required for transportation and refrigeration. By reducing the distance through locally grown fish, even in land-locked areas, the footprint associated with fish consumption is reduced. How about flavor? Five Baltimore chefs prepared two plates or five different dishes—one using wild-caught fish and the other using laboratory-grown fish. According to chef Damon Hersh, “You couldn’t tell them apart.” 25

PERSONAL CHOICES THAT HELP 16

UNDERSTANDING THE ISSUE 16

UNDERSTANDING THE ISSUE 16

16 ANALYZING THE SCIENCE

16 EVALUATING NEW INFORMATION www.montereybayaquarium.org/cr/seafoodwatch.aspx

MAKING CONNECTIONS 16