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- <text id=94TT0344>
- <title>
- Apr. 04, 1994: Too Few Fish In The Sea
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 04, 1994 Deep Water
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 70
- Too Few Fish In The Se
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>After reaping the oceans' bounty with careless abandon, the
- world struggles to save an irreplaceable food source
- </p>
- <p>By Michael D. Lemonick--Reported by Andrea Dorfman/New York, Gavin Scott/Ottawa and
- Dick Thompson/Washington, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> When Eric Nurse, 52, first went to sea with the fishing fleet
- from the port of Champneys East in Newfoundland, the cod seemed
- plentiful enough to last forever. Like his father and grandfather
- before him, Nurse returned year after year to the frigid, treacherous
- North Atlantic to harvest the rich waters of the Grand Banks,
- one of the world's most productive fishing areas.
- </p>
- <p> But not anymore. After providing nearly five centuries of uninterrupted
- bounty, the Grand Banks have suddenly run low on fish: northern
- cod populations have plummeted 95% in just a few years. Faced
- with the destruction of an irreplaceable resource, the Canadian
- government has done the unthinkable: prohibited all cod fishing
- indefinitely, and probably until the end of the century. Says
- Nurse, one of 27,000 fishermen thrown out of work by the ban:
- "Fishing is over for my lifetime. The question is, Will it ever
- come back?"
- </p>
- <p> That question is being asked all over the globe--almost everywhere
- that fishermen ply the seas. Many of the most popular fish on
- the world's seafood menu are becoming harder and harder to catch
- as their populations collapse under the relentless assault of
- modern fishing fleets. Haddock, cod and flounder are so scarce
- off Cape Cod that a large part of America's oldest fishing area
- is now off limits. Populations of Atlantic bluefin tuna of breeding
- age have dropped 90% since 1975, and Pacific stocks are starting
- to fall as well. Orange roughy from the waters off New Zealand,
- redfish from the Caribbean, salmon off the American Northwest,
- Atlantic swordfish, Pacific perch--all are vanishing.
- </p>
- <p> Worldwide, says the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization,
- 13 of 17 major ocean fisheries are in trouble. The annual marine-fish
- catch, having peaked at 86 million metric tons in 1989, dipped
- to 82.5 million tons by 1992. That's why representatives of
- 100 nations are now assembled at U.N. headquarters in New York
- City in the second of a series of meetings. The delegates are
- trying for the first time to put international controls on fishing
- for commercially valuable species.
- </p>
- <p> So far, the fish deficit has had little impact on consumers.
- The prices of some scarce varieties, such as bluefin tuna, have
- jumped, but in other cases long-distance fleets have traveled
- to alternative fishing areas, often in the southern hemisphere.
- In addition, fish suppliers are selling more of species not
- popular in the past, including dogfish and whiting. Most important,
- seafood manufacturers are making up for the ocean-fish shortage
- through aquiculture, the use of fish farms. Large populations
- of everything from sole to scallops are raised in big tanks
- or cages near the shore.
- </p>
- <p> None of this is any consolation to the many traditional fishing
- communities that are suffering. The anguish runs deep in New
- England, for example, where fishermen are upset about new restrictions
- on the size of their catch. Earlier this month a procession
- of fishing boats staged a demonstration in Boston Harbor, and
- a group of 20 outraged workers protested in Gloucester, Massachusetts,
- turning over cars and dumping fish off a truck. Massachusetts
- Governor William Weld promised $10 million in aid to fishing
- towns and called for federal help. That came last week, when
- the Clinton Administration announced a $30 million aid package
- for New England and said it planned to ask Congress for $50
- million more. Declared Commerce Secretary Ron Brown: "We had
- to respond quickly to what is clearly a crisis. There's been
- gross overfishing in the New England fisheries and an extraordinary
- depletion of that natural resource." Some of the assistance,
- he said, will go toward training fishermen for new jobs.
- </p>
- <p> That may be easier than ensuring an adequate supply of fish,
- which provides one-sixth of humanity's animal protein. As the
- population surges, so will demand. Trying to buy time by switching
- to alternative species or different parts of the world, says
- Michael Sutton of the World Wildlife Fund, "is like rearranging
- deck chairs on the Titanic." And aquiculture is not a guaranteed
- solution: fish raised in crowded conditions on farms are vulnerable
- to disease and genetic defects from inbreeding.
- </p>
- <p> The fishing industry began sailing into its predicament during
- the 1970s, when increasingly sophisticated technology enabled
- fleets of all sizes and nationalities to venture farther from
- port than ever before. Sonar and radar helped locate the fish
- wherever they were hiding. Satellite-navigation systems let
- ships return over and over to prime spots. Newly built "factory
- ships" deployed nets so huge that they could swallow 12 jumbo
- jets in a single gulp. Led by the U.S., many countries made
- waters up to 200 miles from their shores off limits to foreign
- boats. But as soon as intruding vessels drew farther out to
- sea, domestic fleets expanded to take advantage of reduced competition.
- </p>
- <p> By the late 1980s, many kinds of fish were verging on "commercial
- extinction"--they were still around, but not in great enough
- numbers to supply fishing boats. In some cases, countries have
- agreed on fishing bans until stocks recover. Last February,
- for example, six nations reached a tentative pact to restrict
- pollack fishing in an area known as the "doughnut hole," in
- the international waters of the Bering Sea.
- </p>
- <p> But these arrangements don't always work: Russia has been trying
- to orchestrate a second pollack treaty in the Sea of Okhotsk,
- off Siberia, but Poland, South Korea and China have refused
- to go along. And even when nations enact bans or quotas for
- certain species, they can be difficult to enforce. Sometimes
- ships flying flags of convenience just ignore agreements.
- </p>
- <p> Trying to forge a global treaty will be especially daunting.
- Countries with desirable fish off their coasts, including Canada,
- New Zealand, Argentina and Iceland, point fingers at so-called
- distant nations, such as Japan, Poland, Taiwan and the European
- Union countries, for taking too many fish just outside the 200-mile
- limit. The distant nations, in turn, blame coastal states for
- poor management inside the boundaries.
- </p>
- <p> In fact, biologists agree that the most seriously endangered
- populations are those living near coastlines. While an all-encompassing
- treaty would be ideal, the most urgent need is for nations to
- do a better job of tending to their own fishing grounds. Putting
- restrictions on local fishermen is always politically tough--but not as tough as trying to refill empty seas.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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