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State of the Marine Environment Rainer Froese Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences, Kiel IfM-GEOMAR [email protected] Acknowledgements • • • • Sea Around Us provided data FishBase provided data EEA provided data Daniel Pauly, Boris Worm and Ian Payne shared slides • DG Development and DG Research supported previous research Overview • • • • Major Threats to European Seas Paradox of Fishing Myths about Fishing Common Sense Fisheries Policy Europe‘s Regional Seas Major Threats to Europe‘s Seas 1. Fishing (NE, North Sea, Mediterranean, Baltic, Black Sea) Fishing Down Marine Food Webs Pauly et al. 1998 Science 279:860-863 Trophic Level 5 4 3 2 Watson and Pauly In: Atlas of the Ocean Fishing Down the Food Web in the North Sea (Source: Froese and Pauly 2003) 3.5 4 3.5 3 Trophic Level 2.5 3.3 2 3.2 1.5 Catch 1 3.1 0.5 3 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 Years Trends in mean trophic level of annual landings from the North Sea 0 2000 Million Tonnes / year Mean Trophic Level 3.4 Major Threats to Europe‘s Seas 1. Fishing (NE, North Sea, Mediterranean, Baltic, Black Sea) 2. Pollution (North Sea, Baltic, Black Sea) Pollution Regional trends of hazardous substances in fish from north-east Atlantic and Baltic regions (Source: EEA) Major Threats to Europe‘s Seas 1. Fishing (NE, North Sea, Mediterranean, Baltic, Black Sea) 2. Pollution (North Sea, Baltic, Black Sea) 3. Eutrophication (Black Sea, Baltic, North Sea) Eutrophication Chlorophyll-a concentrations in transitional, coastal and marine waters (Source: EEA) Major Threats to Europe‘s Seas 1. Fishing (NE, North Sea, Mediterranean, Baltic, Black Sea) 2. Pollution (North Sea, Baltic, Black Sea) 3. Eutrophication (Black Sea, Baltic, North Sea) 4. Climate change (NE, North Sea) Climate change Observed European annual average temperature deviations (Source: EEA) Major Threats to Europe‘s Seas 1. Fishing (NE, North Sea, Mediterranean, Baltic, Black Sea) 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Pollution (North Sea, Baltic, Black Sea) Eutrophication (Black Sea, Baltic, North Sea) Climate change (NE, North Sea) Invasive species (Black Sea, Mediterranean) Local threats: Coastal developments, Mariculture, Shipping accidents Paradox of Fishing • Reducing pollution, eutrophication, green house gases, and ballast water introductions are ‚common sense‘ solutions that seem to work. • Fishing less to get more fish is not ‚common sense‘ • Fishers and boats are less but fishing effort has increased • Focus only on reducing fishing effort has not worked in the past 100 years and is unlikely to work in the future. Time Series of Abundance and Fishing Mortality Trends from ‘Working Group’ reports by fisheries scientists in government agencies (NMFS, DFO, DIFMAR, IFREMER, etc.), compiled by R. A. Myers. Myths about Fishing • There are enough fish... FAO Marine Catches 1951-1998 (Source: Froese and Pauly 2003) 100% Percent of World Fisheries 26% 22% 5.1 years 31% 80% Collapsed 4.1 years Overfished 5.0 years Fully exploited 60% 38% Developing 4.3 years 40% 20% 0% 1951 Undeveloped ? 1956 1961 1966 1971 1976 Years 1981 1986 1991 1996 The Northeast Atlantic, ICES (Source: Froese and Pauly 2003) 100% Collapsed Percent of ICES Fisheries 28% 5.1 years 75% 43% 3.9 years 50% Overfished Fully exploited Developing 25% Undeveloped 0% 1974 1978 1982 1986 Years 1990 1994 1998 Geographic expansion of fisheries (Source: Sea Around Us) Years at and after maximum catch in half-degree cell Myths about Fishing • There are enough fish... • It is the climate... Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Source: Myers and Worm 2003. Nature 423: 280-283 Myths about Fishing • There are enough fish... • It is the climate... • It is the pollution... (t/km2) Biomass of table fish in 1900 (Christensen et al. 2003, Fish & Fisheries) and in 2000…. Myths about Fishing • • • • There are enough fish... It is the climate... It is the pollution... Size does not matter... Size Does Matter! 1. Size at first maturity: fish caught below that size could not spawn; 2. Size at maximum yield: fish caught below that size have not yet reached optimum weight; 3. Mega-spawner size (many eggs, high egg survival, good genes): fish caught below that size have no chance to become Megaspawners EC Minimum Size Limits Council Regulation No 2555/2001 Species EC Minimum Size Atlantic cod 41 cm Size at first Size at maturity maximum yield 60 cm 85 cm American plaice Yellowtail flounder Greenland halibut 25 cm 20 cm 25 cm 25 cm 26 cm 29 cm 30 cm 58 cm 72 cm Myths about Fishing • • • • • • • There are enough fish... It is the climate... It is the pollution... Size does not matter... Recruitment can be predicted... Stocks will recover... Aquaculture is the solution... Aquaculture is Part of the Problem • 3-4 kg of wild fish to culture 1 kg of salmon • 5 kg of wild fish for 1 kg of cod • 20 kg of wild fish for fattening of 1 kg of tuna • More Aquaculture means less wild fish for human consumption Three Simple Steps from CFP to Common Sense Fisheries Policy 1. Let them spawn – Size at first maturity is known for all stocks 2. Let them grow – Size of maximum yield per recruit is known for all stocks and is slightly beyond size at maturity 3. Let some live – Old, large fish produce more eggs, have better genes, and provide an insurance against recruitment failures CSFP Commercial Landings of Nile perch in 1982 100 90 80 Numbers 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 Length (cm) 140 160 180 200 220 CSFP Commercial Landings of Nile perch in 1982 100 Lm 90 Lopt Linf 80 Numbers 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 Length (cm) 140 160 180 200 220 CSFP Common Sense Fisheries Policy • Agree on biology of stock: maturity, spawning time and area, productivity • Agree on percentage of first-time spawners to be caught (10 – 50 %) • Determine annual number of first time spawners by survey on spawning grounds • Allow fishing of first-time spawners after spawning season • Provide strong incentives for catching only fish of the desired size (mix of Policy Instruments) • Only import mature fish Don‘t Eat Babies Rainer Froese IfM, Düsternbrooker Weg 20 24105 Kiel, Germany [email protected] As a result of overfishing, most fishes are now caught before they had a chance to reproduce. This results in low catches (growth overfishing) and very small spawning stocks (recruitment overfishing). We suggest that fish of a given suitable stock are only caught after the first and before the second spawning in order to obtain maximum biomass and at the same time rebuild and maintain strong spawning stocks including large, fit ‘mega-spawners‘. The percentage to be taken from this cohort will depend on the species and on the status of the stock, and should be agreed between all parties involved. As the size of the cohort can be easily determined through surveys before and during first spawning, the total allowed catch in a given year can be determined quite accurately and transparently. We suggest that such simple regulations can be easier communicated and enforced than traditional management tools. Preliminary size at first maturity can be obtained from www.fishbase.org for all commercial fishes of the world. This size is shown below for some commercial fishes of the North Sea. Similar posters can be used to educate fishers, fish dealers, and consumers. European Sprat, Sprattus sprattus, Lm = 10 cm TL Herring, Clupea harengus, Lm = 24 cm TL Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua, Lm = 50 cm TL Atlantic mackerel, Scomber scombrus, Lm = 30 cm FL European plaice Pleuronectes platessus Lm = 28 cm TL Thank You More information: • Froese, R. 2004. Keep it simple: three indicators to deal with overfishing. Fish and Fisheries 5:86-91 • Froese, R. 2004. Keep fishery management simple. ICES Newsletter 41:9-10 Copies available from [email protected]