Source: Brad Plumer via Washington Post
Want to see how severely we humans are scouring the oceans for fish? Check out this striking map from the World Wildlife Fund’s 2012 “Living Planet Report.” The red areas are the most intensively fished (and, in many cases, overfished) parts of the ocean — and they’ve expanded dramatically since 1950:
Between 1950 and 2006, the WWF
report notes, the world’s annual fishing haul more than quadrupled, from
19 million tons to 87 million tons. New technology — from deep-sea
trawling to long-lining — has helped the fishing industry harvest areas
that were once inaccessible. But the growth of intensive fishing also
means that larger and larger swaths of the ocean are in danger of being
depleted.
Daniel Pauly, a professor of fisheries at the University of British Columbia, has dubbed
this situation “The End of Fish.” He points out that in the past 50
years, the populations of many large commercial fish such as bluefin
tuna and cod have utterly collapsed, in some cases shrinking more than
90 percent (see the chart to the right).
Indeed, there’s some evidence that we’ve already
hit “peak fish.” World fish production seems to have reached its zenith
back in the 1980s, when the global catch was higher than it is today.
And, according to one recent study
in the journal Science, commercial fish stocks are on pace for total
“collapse” by 2048 — meaning that they’ll produce less than 10 percent
of their peak catch. On the other hand, many of those fish-depleted
areas will be overrun by jellyfish, which is good news for anyone who
enjoys a good blob sandwich.
The full WWF report
(PDF), meanwhile, is chock full of brightly colored graphs charting the
decline of wildlife across the globe. All told, global vertebrate
populations have declined by some 30 percent since 1970. But that number
masks a lot of variation. Wildlife actually appears to be recovering in
the temperate areas, while it’s utterly collapsing in the tropics. (It
seems there have been some modest conservation successes in the
wealthier temperate regions — the European otter is staging an impressive comeback, for instance.)
The
big thing the WWF paper emphasizes, however, is that human consumption
patterns are currently unsustainable. We’re essentially consuming the
equivalent of one and a half Earths each year. This is possible because
we borrow from the future, as is the case with fish — one day the
world’s fish population may collapse, but there’s plenty for us now. WWF
doesn’t quite call it a Ponzi scheme, but that’s the first metaphor
that comes to mind.
So is there any way to stop this slide? After
all, it’s not like people can just stop eating fish altogether. Pauly,
surprisingly, is fairly optimistic. He argues that strict government
quotas on catches can help stop the slide. “There is no need for an end
to fish,” he writes,
“or to fishing for that matter.” (He’s not sold on aquaculture, or fish
farming, since it often requires huge harvests of smaller fish to feed
the big carnivorous ones in farms.)
The hitch is that when governments have tried to institute such quotas in the past — as they’ve recently attempted with Atlantic bluefin tuna — the rules tend to get, uh, watered down under intense lobbying. Or else shadowy black sushi markets
emerge
to flout the rules. But no one said it was easy, halting the end of fish.
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