A new study called the “Sea Around Us” by the University of
British Columbia has revealed that the global seafood catch is much larger and
declining much faster than previously known. It reconstructed the global catch
between 1950 and 2010 and found that it was 30 per cent higher than what
countries have been reporting to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in
Rome since 1950.
In the Caribbean the catch was more than twice as large as
previously reported and declining at a rate 60 per cent faster than the
official rate, the study found. Overall, the study found that Caribbean islands
catch soared from 230,000 tons in 1950 to 830,000 in 2004 before crashing to
470,000 in 2010. “And that doesn’t tell the whole story,” Pauly said. “What
happened is that as reef fish like snappers and groupers were depleted,
islanders ventured farther offshore in search of tuna, whose catch went from
7,000 tons in 1950 to 25,000 tons in 2004,” he said. But the tuna stocks, long
beyond the reach of the islanders, had been hard-hit by the highly-subsidized
European, Asian and American fleets and their own numbers have been steadily
dropping. Even as more and more islanders participated in the effort to
substitute their vanished reef fish with tuna, that catch declined to 20,000
tons in the six years from 2004 to 2010, the study showed. Conversely, the
catch of groupers and snappers declined by a third from 2004 to 2010.
“This trend needs to be reversed urgently, or else a lot of
people who depend on the sea for affordable protein are going to suffer,” said
Daniel Pauly, a fisheries scientist who led the study. “And climate change is
just going to make things worse.” Climate change is expected to harm the
Caribbean in several ways, Pauly says. Spikes of warm water temperatures that
kill corals are becoming more frequent, leaving the corals less time to
recover. The population of herbivores like parrotfish, on which the corals rely
on to keep algae under control, has been decimated. Finally, adds William
Cheung, a marine ecologist at UBC who works with Pauly, the Caribbean’s warming
waters are driving fish away from the equator. “We estimate the shift in the
center of gravity of some species’ range will be 50 kilometers per decade,” he
said. In part because animals reproduce less in a new environment, the warming
waters will further diminish the overall fish populations in the Caribbean,
with major decreases in the south and slight increases in the north, he
explained.
Since 1950, countries have been required to file to the FAO
their entire catch of fish and seafood. Discards – fish caught unintentionally
and of little commercial value – were exempted because the program was
originally designed to monitor economic development, not overfishing. But it
was long suspected that some countries only bothered reporting the industrial
catch by the larger vessels because these pay easy-to-track fees and because
they unload their catch in a small number of places and are thus easiest to
monitor. The subsistence catch of people who fish for their families, the
artisanal catch by those with small boats, the recreational catch by amateur
fishermen all were thought to be greater than reported but to an unknown
extent. For its part, the FAO gave no precise indications of how skewered its
numbers might be. Dirk Zeller, the study’s co-author, said that virtually all
countries routinely blend hard numbers with estimates and could “estimate the
uncertainties around their reported data if they chose, but no one does… Fish
stocks are like a stock portfolio,” explained Zeller. “Before you decide how
much to sell, you want to know exactly how much you have and how much it’s
growing or shrinking.”
The result shows that the real catch was a third larger than
the one reported by the FAO. The UN agency says the global catch peaked in 1996
at 86 million tons and stood at 77 million tons in 2010, while the Canadian
reconstruction found that it peaked, also in 1996, but at 130 million tons, and
stood 110 million tons in 2010. More alarmingly, the study found that the
decline was triple the amount reported by the FAO, which recently called the
catch “basically stable.”
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