Some migratory fish species in the North Atlantic have declined by more than 95 percent.
Populations of numerous migratory fish species in the North Atlantic have declined by more than 95 percent, threatening not only food supplies and economic systems, but also the way humans perceive the health of the planet's ecosystems, according to a paper published today (Dec. 1) in the journal BioScience.
"It's shocking," said Dr. Karin Limburg, a fisheries ecologist at the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry in Syracuse, N.Y., who is the paper's lead author.
Limburg and her co-author, Dr. John Waldman of Queens College of the City University of New York, report that a complex combination of habitat loss (caused largely by the construction of dams that prevent fish access to traditional spawning areas), urban sprawl, overfishing, pollution and climate change have led to the precipitous decline. Compounding the problem, they say, is the evolving knowledge of the humans who make decisions about how natural resources are managed.
"We're looking at shifting baselines here," Limburg said. "Every human generation gains knowledge about the world and establishes a baseline for what's normal. But there is no institutional memory about how things used to be."
As an example, Limburg pointed to a graph that depicts the status of the American shad between 1887 and 1997. It indicates the species was more than 10 times as plentiful during most of the early years of that period as it was during the middle of the 20th century. But a second chart shows that the levels in the 1880s were just 10 percent of what they had been 50 years earlier.
"We can't envision salmon being a thing of the past," she said. "That was once the case with shad. It was the most important fish in U.S. fisheries, after cod." In fact, the shad's Latin name (Alosa sapidissima) reflects the species' high status as a food fish: "sapidissima" means "most delicious."
In their findings, the authors wrote: "Loss of historical baselines contributes to marginalization of the species, as social customs relating to bygone (collapsed) fisheries also perish, and ecosystems unravel at rates that go unnoticed."
Declines were seen in all but two of the fish populations studied. Striped bass, already the subject of protective measures, increased in North America, and lampreys were found to be more abundant in some rivers in France.
The analysis showed that the once-abundant allis shad, a member of the herring family that lives most of its life in coastal waters but migrates into rivers to spawn, plummeted by 99.9 percent in the Rhine River in the Netherlands between 1886 and 1933; the same species dropped by 99.4 percent in the Minho River in Portugal between 1925 and 1988. The European eel's population plunged 95.4 percent in the Ems River, which flows through the Netherlands and Germany, and in the Vidå River in Denmark between 1960 and 1997; it decreased by 99.5 percent in the Yser River in Belgium between 1974 and 2004 .
Read full article here http://www.esf.edu/communications/view.asp?newsID=306
11-30-09

World
Katie
- 2 hours ago - theage.com.au
11-01-09

Environment
Claudia
- 15 hours ago - oceansentry.org
An international fisheries group set up to protect Atlantic tuna has done the opposite and driven one species of the fish, the bluefin, to the edge of extinction, environmentalists said Thursday.
On the eve of a 10-day meeting in Brazil of the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), environmentalists accused the group of ignoring the advice of its own scientists and setting fishing quotas for bluefin tuna that have drastically depleted stocks.
ICCAT has for decades set quotas above what its own scientists have recommended for bluefin tuna. Those quotas are systematically exceeded by industrial fleets, which over-fish the species. Combined with illegal fishing, this has caused the population to decline by more than 85 percent in the eastern Atlantic and by more than 90 percent in the western Atlantic.
The environmentalists also called for stricter regulation of the trade in sharks, which are often caught up as "by-catch" in commercial tuna-fishing operations and are also being targeted directly by fishing fleets for their fins and meat....
11-9-09

Animals
Katie
- 4 hours ago - panda.org
10-24-09
STOP Overfishing-A Chance to save 10 Species
10-22-09

Environment
Claudia
- 1 hour ago - oceansentry.org

Claudia For the Oceans (307)
The growing trend of poison fishing in local streams and rivers across the country is threatening the aquatic life in four major river ecosystems -- Karnali, Koshi, Narayani and Mahakali. Rising use of a highly toxic pesticide called 'thiodan' has specially threatened the already vulnerable dolphins. At present, dolphin population in the four rivers is estimated to stand at only 130.
Of late, fishermen and companies granted fishing contracts by the Village Development Committees are using thiodan, an endosulfic organochloric toxin that hits the respiratory tracts of the pests and is thus regarded as very effective pesticide. Thiodan, which is banned in many countries across the globe, is popularly known as ´Machha Marne Ausadhi´ by many fishermen in Nepal, and is being extensively used in small streams that feed the small rivers like Mohana, Kandra and Pathriya in the rainy seasons and the big rivers in the dry season. On the other hand, consuming fishes killed with thiodan can have severe impacts on humans as well. Thiodan is one of the Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs). The molecules of POPs remain in human fat and have severe long-term health as well as genetic impacts on humans....
READ FULL ARTICLE HERE http://www.myrepublica.com/portal/index.php?action=news_details&news_id=10930
10-9-09
Save The Salmon & The Southern Residents Orcas
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/3/save-the-salmon-and-the-southern-resident-orcas
10-5-09

Environment
Claudia
- 52 minutes ago - ctvbc.ctv.ca
On Saturday, they were joined by hundreds of people at the Vancouver Art Gallery who share their concern that one of B.C.'s most treasured resources is being wiped out.
This year, returns on wild salmon fell off dramatically.
Some environmentalists say wild salmon that swam by open-net fish farms to get to their spawning grounds didn't make it and were killed off by sea lice associated with the fish farms.
Biologist Alexandra Morton wants a judicial inquiry. She says it's the only way to get the Department of Fisheries and Oceans to explain what went wrong.
"The investigation has to be thorough if we want to keep our fish. Because this is exactly what happened with East Coast cod," she said.
In February, the B.C. Supreme Court ruled that fish farms are a federal responsibility. But that decision is under appeal.
Some aboriginal groups are worried about what this regulatory void could mean.
"I am extremely worried. I know that in our territories in the archipelago, every fish farm is up for doubling in size," said Bob Chamberlain of the Kwicksutaineuk-ah-kwaw-ah-mish First Nation.
Environmentalists want to see the Fisheries Department regulate fish farms, which would include moving the farms off wild-salmon migration routes.
The department says it will examine any potential causes behind the wild-salmon collapse in a post-season review.
Department officials are not willing to say what they will or won't do regarding fish farms until after the court case is settled.
The case is scheduled to resume later this month.
This post was modified from its original form on 05 Oct, 2:59
10-5-09
STOP The Sales Of Painted Glassfish In South Africa
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/7/stop-the-sales-of-painted-glassfish-in-south-africa
9-24-09

Environment
Daphna
- 18 hours ago - theanimalrescuesite.com
9-23-09

Science & Tech
Angela
- 22 hours ago - underwatertimes.com
9-22-09

Environment
Daphna
- 8 hours ago - thepetitionsite.com
9-18-09

Environment
Daphna
- 13 hours ago - farmedanddangerous.org
9-17-09
Animals
Angela
- 4 hours ago - english.people.com.cn
9-15-09

Animals
Cal
- 2 hours ago - practicalfishkeeping.co.uk

Animals
Cher
- 15 hours ago - wildlifeextra.com
9-10-09

Environment
Cal
- 9 hours ago - timesonline.co.uk
9-9-09

Environment
Claudia
- 43 minutes ago - edition.cnn.com
9-5-09
9-5-09

It's Time to Dine on Slime: Overfishing, Pollution Could Change Our Seafood Diets
Environment
Claudia
- 4 minutes ago - courant.com
Noted. Thanks

Animals
Maria
- 14 hours ago - search.japantimes.co.jp
Good to here. Great News. Thanks ![]()

Animals
Maria
- 2 days ago - ecoworldly.com
Thanks for news.
Vanishing King Salmon in Alaska's Yukon River Leave Smokehouses Empty, Economic Crisis
Animals
Terry
- 6 hours ago - latimes.com
Thanks for sharing.
Britain calls for ban on sale of endangered bluefin tuna
Britain and France are to lobby governments for an international ban on the sale of bluefin tuna. Fisheries minister Huw Irranca- Davies confirmed Britain will back the fight to protect the delicacy.
The Nobu chain recently attracted criticism from conservationists after continuing to serve bluefin at its London restaurants.
France, which is said to have a bigger bluefin fishing fleet than anyone else, also announced it would support a ban of the fish at the Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species (Cities).
Support for a ban is almost certain to put Britain on a collision course with Japan, where bluefish is a highly-prized ingredient for sushi and sashimi dishes.
Concern over stocks of the popular fish has grown since the release of the documentary film The End of the Line, which portrayed bluefin tuna as the clearest example of modern over-fishing.
Mr Irranca-Davies said: "I can confirm that the UK will support a Cities listing of bluefin tuna.
I so hope that we can bring more awereness about the trouble the oceans are in.I've submitted 2 links for you to follow
Follow this link to watch the trailer of The End of the Line http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bedirwk95Oc&feature=channel
The trailer takes about 2 min.I recommend this film.If you have to go see it,please do and tell your friends and family.It should be shown at every school all over the world
Hugs Claudia *For the Oceans*

Environment
Cher
- 1 day ago - wcs.org


