New paper in
Science introduces revolutionary new paradigm for fishery
management
This article
can be viewed on-line at Science
Magazine.
MIAMI, July 16, 2004 ~
Seventeen of the world’s top marine scientists today unveiled a
plan that seeks to avert the collapse of fish populations by
focusing on managing the entire ecosystem rather than one species
at a time. The new management regime, coined “Ecosystem-Based
Fishery Management,” is detailed in the July 16 issue of Science
(vol. 305, no. 5682, July 16) and is the first step toward
revolutionizing the way fisheries are managed to ensure
long-lasting sustainability.
This significant
advancement would overturn the paradigm of maximizing the catch of
individual species that has prevailed for more than half a century.
National legislation to promote the use of ecosystem-based fishery
management is expected by September in the U.S. Senate and House
of Representatives.

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The consensus
statement by prominent fishery experts representing 14 research
institutions in the United States, the United Kingdom, and
Australia, delineates an inclusive approach to fishery management
that would balance economic and environmental concerns. It places
paramount importance on the overall health of ecosystems, and then
considers factors such as predator-prey relationships among
species, the quality of the habitat they rely upon, the direct and
indirect effects of fish capture methods, and finally, the target
species itself.
“We’ve been
putting blinders on, but it is now clear that single-species
management is inadequate, and in many cases, destructive,” says
Dr. Ellen Pikitch, an internationally renowned fisheries scientist
and the Executive Director and Professor with the Pew Institute
for Ocean Science at the University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School
of Marine and Atmospheric Science. Pikitch, the lead author on the
paper also noted: “An ecosystem-based approach is founded
on the notion that robust fisheries depend upon healthy marine
ecosystems.”

View the names
of the paper`s authors
Movement towards
ecosystem-based approaches has been recommended by the Pew Oceans
Commission in 2003, in the recently released draft report of the
U.S. Commission on Ocean Policy, and in a number of international
arenas. Some elements of the approach are already being
implemented in California, Alaska and Australia.
The authors write,
“Ideally, EBFM would shift the burden of proof so that fishing
would not take place unless it could be shown not to harm key
components of the ecosystem.” In addition, an ecosystem-focused
approach would stimulate research about ecosystem processes and
the likely consequences of human actions.
“Ecosystem-based
fishery management can be implemented right now, even in cases
where very little information is available,” says Pikitch.
“Because of the complexity and uncertainty about marine
ecosystems, this approach will inevitably require erring on the
side of caution.”
Managers would need to
pay closer attention to the entire food web, such as to prey
species critical to the endangered Steller Sea Lion in Alaska, and
to bycatch (non-targeted species) such as white marlin, which has
been inadvertently decimated because of tuna and swordfish
fishing.
“Overfishing top
predators like marlins is dangerous, because these species fill a
vital role in marine food webs,” says co-author Dr. Elizabeth
Babcock, Chief Scientist with the Pew Institute for Ocean Science
at the Rosenstiel School. Babcock attributes over 90 percent of
the annual mortality of white marlin to the tuna and swordfish
longline fisheries.
Although moving to
ecosystem-based fishery management will not be easy, the
report’s authors stress that it should begin immediately,
because the potential benefits trump the status quo of
species-focused management.
The authors include
three winners of the highly prestigious award from the Pew Fellows
Program in Marine Conservation that became part of the Pew
Institute for Ocean Science in October 2003. They are Paul Dayton
from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Burr Heneman from
Commonweal, a health and environmental research institute in
California, and Pikitch.
For interviews with
authors of the paper, illustrations and photographs contact Jim
Harper at 305-361-4165 or jharper@rsmas.miami.edu.
The Science paper is available by request from the AAAS Office of
Public Programs at 202-326-6440 or scipak@aaas.org,
or can be viewed on-line at Science
Magazine.
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