Oceans Empty By 2048? 589
F34nor writes to mention a CBS news article about the depopulation of ocean species. According to a study by a scientist in Halifax, Nova Scotia and assisted by research from all around the world, the world's oceans will be emptied of large lifeforms by 2048. From the article: "Already, 29% of edible fish and seafood species have declined by 90% — a drop that means the collapse of these fisheries. But the issue isn't just having seafood on our plates. Ocean species filter toxins from the water. They protect shorelines. And they reduce the risks of algae blooms such as the red tide. 'A large and increasing proportion of our population lives close to the coast; thus the loss of services such as flood control and waste detoxification can have disastrous consequences,' Worm and colleagues say."
Harrumph (Score:2, Funny)
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No whale! It canned be true! They didn't just trawl this up, you know!
Re:Harrumph (Score:4, Informative)
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No real argument (Score:2)
Every bit helps (Score:3, Informative)
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Tell that to the Japanese [abc.net.au]
Core Problem: Human Over-population (Score:4, Interesting)
Buying farm-raised fish is not the answer. To raise such fish, the farmers harvest other fish from the oceans in order to feed the fish on the farms. The end result is still the depletion of the wildlife in the oceans.
The only and correct solution is to stop growing the human population. However, no one wants to talk about over-population because talking about it usually elicits accusations of "bigot" or "racist".
The political mantra in the USA is that growing the population is wonderful. Both the "Wall Street Journal" (WSJ) and the "New York Times" (NYT) supports it. Both the WSJ and the NYT argue that unfettered immigration enriches everyone; talk about over-population runs contrary to unfettered immigration.
Over-population reminds me of global warming. Both are very serious problems, yet most people just do not feel the immediacy and seriousness of these problems. So, they hesitate to do anything that is substantive in fixing these problems -- until the day that the huge calamity (i.e. famine or environmental disaster) hits.
Re: There is not enough fish to satiate... (Score:2)
Hmm, I was always (back in Soviet Russia, really!) taught that these 6 billion people look forward every day towards some bread... Or rice... (In rare years we were not at war with -- equally "Communist" -- China).
What makes you think all of The World's Underprivileged People are going to go after the bluefish tuna tomorrow, if I may ask?
Paul B.
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True, but there doesn't need to be enough fish to feed 6 billion people. There are many other food sources, and as usual, a healthy mix does the trick.
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Immigration is generally from poor cou
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You are wrong in 2 ways:
1) Overpopulation isn't really a global problem, it's mostly a local problem. Overpopulated Bangla Desh doesn't affect us a lot, now does it? Only mass immigration causes overpopulation in areas which otherwise wouldn't have any.
2) Of course it affects world population. If a country lives at or near the carrying capacity and is able to export it's population surplus, the remaining population will just breed more, because of
No it doesn't (Score:2)
Farm-raised fish, alas, have their own impacts. If the fish are high on the food chain (like salmon), somebody has to go out and catch fish to feed the farm fish. Plus fish farms cause pollution that impacts the wild environment. Finally, there's a lot of fear that farm fish will be hot zones for diseases that will spread to wild fish. No magic solution here.
The real solution consists of simple, common-sense resource management. You don't fish species that are obviously in trouble. You set aside zones for
Farmed salmon are not vegetarians. (Score:2)
Mind you, some types of aquaculture are better. I think the linked article mentions clams and catfish whi
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They did it in Europe and all we got in return is Mad Cow Disease and its sibling the wonderful Creuzfeld-Jacob Disease that turns your brain into mush.
Farmed Fish (Score:2)
The problem has nothing to do with people eating fish. It's more to do with the fact that for every fish caught for food, a hundred more are caught to be ground up and used in various animal feeds and fertilizers, as well as the fact trawlers destroy vast tracts of the seafloor ecosystem so thoroughly that regrowth can take centuries. Banning
They seem to be forgetting something... (Score:2, Insightful)
Higher Price = Less Demand
Less Demand = Fish Population Increases
If a can of tuna went for $300 dollars because of a tuna shortage, I bet a lot of people would start cutting back on their tuna consumption.
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That depends. Can the "fishing industry" make decisions regarding it's furthered survival? It can't if it's run Laissez-Faire style. In such a case, if you decide to hold off on overfishing, someone else will just take your place. In non-regulated capitalism, doing the *right* thing is often also the *stupid* thing.
On the other hand, if there's a strong, viable international body which oversees and regulates the fishing industry--and I
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Ecosystems don't work that way. Fish need a certain population density to breed properly. They don't use singles bars like us humans.
The linear relationship you assume exists...doesn't.
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You can only depopulate a species so much before their chances of survival as a speicies (even after you stop farming them) goes down. There has to be enough of them to create stable populations, find mates, and produce enough new young to continue the population.
Do we know how close any of these species tipping point towards extinction is to the price point where demand drops low enough for them to recover?
My guess is that would be a very hard question to answer.
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Many posters in this thread seem to think economic supply and demand will stop overfishing in time, but this is not necessarily the end of the story.
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It doesn't always work that way. For example, real caviar is so expensive that only very few people can afford it, yet many types of sturgeon are endangered, and we have to resort to other means (such as aquaculture [wikipedia.org]) to keep the species from becoming extinct. What I'm tr
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If tuna went for $300/can, it would be even more aggressively fished, not less.
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Supply and demand affect price, but price also affects demand. If after all those factors are combined you're not beating the ROI you can make elsewhere,
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Try looking at it this way. With tuna at $300/can, the market for it is people who (1) can afford $300 for a can of food and (2) think tuna is the best way to spend the $300. A small fishing fleet would suffice to serve that kind of niche market.
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Not really (Score:2)
Less Demand = Fish Catching Decreases
Unfortunately, less fishing does not have to mean that population increases, only that is decreases less. That is no guarantee that catches reach sustainable levels, and it seems quite unlikely given the example of the levels in todays equilibrium.
If there was private ownership of meaningful parts of the ocean, the profit motive would ensure that only sustainable amounts be taken. I hear Iceland and New Zealand have
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If tuna fisherman could get $300 for every can of tuna they sold, I bet they'd be a lot more motivated to catch every last tuna they could find. How much do you suppose the last tuna on Earth (ever!) would sell for?
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Re:Totally untrue. (Score:2)
What makes you so sure they aren't? It's not like fish know how to hide from nets and sonar.
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Someone must care -- you obviously do. There are probably more like you. Take advantage of that fact.
Say there's someone who owns an school of endangered fish and really doesn't care about preservation. Without violating anyone's rights, what c
If I were an investor (Score:2)
If we can build massive floating factories that sweep away the sea life, then maybe, just maybe, we can build ships to clear out toxins and drive back the red tide of algea. It seems like that's about our only hope.
We wanted to control our environment and Nature said: "Good, then you can do this stuff too! How about balancing ocean life? Would you like to maintain a protective ozone, too?" So far, our answer ha
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Only one response to this... (Score:2)
By 2048 (Score:2)
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Ok then... (Score:2)
It's so self-evident (Score:4, Insightful)
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The Pacific NW supplies a large amount of fish to the Pacific ocean. US fishing rules are pretty strict, but made around sustainable numbers.
Japanese though, still take flipper in their nets. They sit at the 9 mile limit. Remember the ship that went aground a few years ago in Oregon? Japanese fishing trawler. These few nations are having a huge impact on fish and don't care about reigning them in. And for once, the US isn't a nation th
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To make matters worse, you can't actually farm many fish. One day we might have the technology, but currently there are many fish that we simply can't farm. Even the one's that we do farm we tend to feed with fish caught in the wild.
I am not saying that we shouldn't do anything, just that the political
Re:It's so self-evident (Score:5, Informative)
the wastes produced by farming
the fish that escape
the diseases and parasites that occur in farms
the chemicals used to treat diseased fish
the problems of stock depletion and contamination of feed.
See:
http://www.focs.ca/fishfarming/index.asp [www.focs.ca]
http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2000/july12
http://www.davidsuzuki.org/Oceans/Aquaculture/Sal
http://www.westcoastaquatic.ca/article_fishfarms_
And many others.
What I find to be self evident is that the real issue is simply to many people, not enough planet.
Better solution? (Score:2)
rhY
Gov. replies (Score:2)
Whats next? (Score:2, Funny)
Obligatory quote... (Score:4, Funny)
Boston Commons problems (Score:2)
Anyone else get caught by this title... (Score:2, Funny)
They always justify (Score:2)
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Humans are pathetic.
I for one... (Score:2)
The Solution (Score:2)
replacing fish in my diet (Score:5, Interesting)
I've stopped eating fish - partially because it's expensive to get good wild salmon, but mainly because I think I can do better for less of a financial outlay. I figure that fish are best eaten for their Omega-3 essential fatty acid, and I can get that fat elsewhere. I buy grass-fed beef from a family farmer, and omega-3 enriched eggs when I can't find any eggs from local farmers. The omega-3 enrichment in eggs typically comes from flax in the chicken feed.
I'm currently growing purslane [seedsofchange.com] in my Earthbox [earthbox.com], and am working on some Perilla [swallowtai...nseeds.com] seedlings too. Both are high in omega 3 [wikipedia.org] (in the form of alpha-linolenic acid [ALA]), and I plan on eating them as salad greens. (Summer heat kills plants in the desert, so fall/winter/spring are the best growing months.)
And if I ever start raising chickens [kuro5hin.org], I can grow Perilla and Purslane as feed for home-grown DHA and EPA-enriched eggs (letting the chickens do the ALA->DHA/EPA conversion).
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Oil spills (Score:2)
I saw a decrease... (Score:5, Informative)
It really helps to get a handle on this if you stop thinking of it as fishing, and no, I am not kidding. Just a little mental trick works well. Switch the term from fishing to "oceanic market hunting", then go back and look in history what market hunting did to wild terrestrial animal species, passenger pigeon, bison, migratory wildfowl, the dodo, etc. It did not take long historically speaking to see humongous stock depletion. Ocean fishing is market hunting, it will have the same effect eventually, there's no way around it. The time frame may be arguable, but the effect won't if let to go on like it is now, because there will be demand, even if it is only from the top 2% of thee wealthiest. I mean, they used to serve *plovers tongues* in restaurants. That's the sort of goofy market pressure that can happen, all the way to extinction or near extinction.
The only way we managed to even remotely save a lot of terrestrial species was with a total ban on wild game hunting for commercial purposes(I will only speak of the US now I really don't have much knowledge of this from other countries). We have personal sport hunting now and that has worked with a lot of good game management in place, and that only came about from enough people noticing "hey, where did all the animals go to???" It was an almost too late collective "duh" moment, and one would hope we have a bit more data and scientific sophistication to work with now than we did in the late 1800s. And even with game management laws in place, some times desperate times can negate those factors. If you go back and look at the great depression era, some species that are in good shape suffered near total collapse, eastern white tailed deer got hunted to severely low levels back then, even though the laws were there, desperately poor people just had to eat, so they did, and the laws were just flaunted.
I agree with another poster above, in the oceans, trawling is responsible because it is so deadly efficient in killing a lot of animals. In the US they used to allow "punt guns" for waterfowl hunting, basically short barreled boat-mounted small cannon, very efficient in harvestng ducks, so efficient that during market hunting times they about wiped out some species in short order, they had to be banned outright, and now shotguns are limited to 10 gauge maximum size. I think we as humans are going to need to address this sort of thing with wild ocean hunting of fish if we don't want to suffer the same fate we did with the land animals. Heck, there has to be some more older New England and Candian slashdotters here who can remember when cod was dirt cheap in the store, I mean rdiculous cheap, I sure can, because they were so abundant, and there were still a lot of other species that were abundant so cod was considered a second tier-class fish, now it ain't so, and cod is now in a decline state and expensive.
Re:We know it's true (Score:4, Funny)
However, I am doing every stupid thing in my power to prevent this from happening.
Sorry, I'm offtopic but (Score:3, Funny)
Slashdot car analogy. (Score:3, Insightful)
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what a hard-nosed skeptic you are (Score:4, Funny)
Re:what a hard-nosed skeptic you are (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:what a hard-nosed skeptic you are (Score:5, Insightful)
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Obvious implication: Nothing happened, so they were wrong. Obviously you're wrong now, and nothing's going to happen. Because, you know, nothing happened in the past.
I don't know why I'm feeding a troll, but I suppose it's too late now. By the way, don't allude to Pink Floyd, if that was your intention with "suns
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I don't like that kind of reasoning: it has always been like this, therefore it always will be like this.
Just because you've survived several rounds of Russian Roulette until now does not mean the next one won't leave your brains on the wall.
Of course, this entirely ignores that we might have survived prior predicted dooms because (gasp) we might have modified our behaviour as a result of those predictions. However, even if this isn't true, the above reasoning is still suspect, and really not worth
Re:what a hard-nosed skeptic you are (Score:5, Informative)
The Heartland Institute, which you sited, is a FUD site. [sourcewatch.org] You've been had.
300 year old trees in rainforest areas never used to burn down every decade or so--and the rainforests of the west coast that people are acting to preserve are precisely these areas. The brush which does burn down every 10 years or so is not preserved for environmental reasons, but because it is typically near housing developments which it will take down with it when it burns. British Columbia has been dealing with this problem for the past ten years--towns that are threatened by wild burns that have been prevented unnaturally. Frankly, we've gotten too good at fighting forest fires--but rainforests are too wet to burn. Old growth stands are taken down for lumber purposes. They are old growth precisely because they do not burn down regularly. But these are precisely the trees most valuable for lumber purposes. They're also very good at conserving water tables, which is of critical importance to Northwest agriculture.
Yellowstone scrub falls in the category of forests that typically burn down on a regular basis.
As for the fish, anyone who has been following reports on fish stocks could see this coming for the past ten years. The Salmon are dying off on the West coast, the Grand Banks of Newfoundland, once the most plentiful fishing grounds on the planet, are dead, plankton, the basis of oceanic ecology, is dying off, the coast of China is pouring billions of tons of effluents into the Pacific, and bottom dragging nets have been destroying spawning habitats for decades. If this is a surprise to you, you really need to pull your head out of your ass once in a while and look around.
So, no trees, no water, no crops, and no livestock which depend on those crops. No fish, no seafood. What, exactly, did you think your kids were going to eat?
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I'm honestly amazed that people cite Crichton at all in a serious discussion. Not because I have anything against the man personally, but because he's a fiction writer.
It's like citing Stephen King on the subject of, say, epidemiology. Does anyone think The Stand is a reputable source of scientific information? No? Then why would State of Fear be? Again, nothing wrong with liking a book,
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I see your point (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:I see your point (Score:5, Insightful)
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This again confirms his theory though. Destabilizing a stable ecosystem leads to spurs of evolution and new species. During the hardest times on Earth, biggest leaps of development happened. Death of dinosaurs led to mammals taking over.
Hope that's the consolation prize. (Score:2)
Your point being what, exactly? That we shouldn't bother to change our fishing regulations, because "life will go on"?
I'm not sure that's exactly a comforting thought, if the human species isn't involved in the 'life' that's going to 'go on.'
To certain species -- rats and co
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Then why do we care at all? It's obvious that we'll find what to eat by "farming" certain species as we see fit. Sea food isn't particularly important, except in few countries like Japan.
Re:I see your point (Score:4, Insightful)
Unfortunately, we do get a lot of food from the oceans right now. Since we only have to catch the fish instead of raising them, it's like getting all that food free. Once that gravy train runs out, we'll have to significantly increase our agricultural output to make up the shortfall. Please read that as, "Our economy will have to work harder to obtain the same amount of food."
Fisheries are a renewable resource, if you harvest from them at a sustainable rate. Think of it as having a bank account with a million dollars in it. If you live solely on the interest, it can be a huge boon, providing you many more dollars over the years than are actually in the account. But if you start spending it irresponsibly on hookers, coke, and Alienware systems, you wake up one day and find that the account is at $1072.38. Instead of providing you ten thousand dollars a year, it can now only provide you ten. Of course, you can leave it alone and it will "recover", but that process won't be complete until long after you're dead.
It galls me when people like yourself talk about how we don't need to worry about destroying resource X, because when it runs out we'll move to resource Y. Especially when that resource could be eternally productive, if people would just agree to live off the interest, instead of sucking it dry. We'll all be worse off when the fish are gone.
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Despite the extremist language, no one is actually talking about the fish being gone. Fisheries "collapsing" means there's not enough to fish. (Or even just that there'
current trends (Score:2)
Besides the statement you quoted, I found this:
That's the problem with systems as mind-bogglingly complex as the ocean: you can't count on current trends continuing. I've recently been studying weather forecasting, and it sounds like they can't have any accuracy at all past like 14 days. They have learned that they can not count on the current trends continuing.
Th
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It really isnt that complex. In some places, two decades ago, you could go out and fish for a few hours from, or nearby the shore, and have enough fish to eat for a week. In those exact same places you can now fish for a week and not have a single fish.
I mean, this isnt some nebulous long-term effect; if you're ever fishing for sport in areas affected, it's quite noticable, and within the
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And you know this was the worst hurricane season ever, because of global warming because it's just going to get worse and worse.
And you know global warming trends are going to continue, until it stops.
But this is absolutely true, this is absolutely correct because you know they are very very smart people and we are just retarded people with computers. It doesn't matter that they are talking 40 years in
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Paraphrased: "Some people have been wrong at some things, so nobody can ever be right!"
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Ebolas with friggen laser beams on their heads.
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That Guy: Let's cut to the chase. There are two kinds of people: Sheep and sharks. Anyone who's a sheep is fired. Who's a sheep?
Zoidberg: Uh, excuse me? Which is the one people like to hug?
That Guy: Gutsy question. You're a shark. Sharks are winners and they don't look back 'cause they don't have necks. Necks are for sheep. [Everyone sinks down and covers their necks.] I am proud to be the shepherd of this herd of sharks and I am gonna lead you to the top in this industry
---
It's on top
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The Combine, obviously.
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Yes, once the number depletes, it'll be harder and harder to kill fish, but for those same fish it will be harder and harder to find a mate and reproduce.
American Buffalo were also almost hunted down t
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Bison.
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Somebody isn't getting any.
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Tell It (Score:2)
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They've studied the oceans and made their predictions to the best of their ability. You are ignorant of their methodology and don't like to hear bad news, so you assume that they are incompetent or dishonest. However, there is such a thing as science, and the scientific method is as good as any that people have come up with. This "I'm so clever that I
Species (Score:2)
In case the sarcasm isn't clear, let me say: you're an idiot.
Many marine food stocks have already collapsed. Very few viable abalone fisheries remain. Whaling is completely impracticle for most species and some have such small gene pools that recovery is basically a fantasy. The atlantic cod and salmon stocks are less than a quarter the size they were in the 1940, and even the 194
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