Richard Black, Environment correspondent, BBC
November 2006
"The image I use to explain why biodiversity is so
important is that marine life is a bit like a house of cards," said Dr Worm.
"All parts of it are integral to the structure; if you remove parts,
particularly at the bottom, it's detrimental to everything on top and
threatens the whole structure.
"And we're learning that in the oceans, species are very strongly linked to
each other - probably more so than on land."
There will be virtually nothing left to fish from the seas by the middle
of the century if current trends continue, according to a major scientific
study.
Stocks have collapsed in nearly one-third of sea fisheries, and the rate of
decline is accelerating.
Writing in the journal Science, the international team of researchers says
fishery decline is closely tied to a broader loss of marine biodiversity.
But a greater use of protected areas could safeguard existing stocks.
"The way we use the oceans is that we hope and assume there will always be
another species to exploit after we've completely gone through the last
one," said research leader Boris Worm, from Dalhousie University in Canada.
"What we're highlighting is there is a finite number of stocks; we have gone
through one-third, and we are going to get through the rest," he told the
BBC News website.
Steve Palumbi, from Stanford University in California, one of the other
scientists on the project, added: "Unless we fundamentally change the way we
manage all the ocean species together, as working ecosystems, then this
century is the last century of wild seafood."
Spanning the seas
This is a vast piece of research, incorporating scientists from many
institutions in Europe and the Americas, and drawing on four distinctly
different kinds of data.
Catch records from the open sea give a picture of declining fish stocks.
In 2003, 29% of open sea fisheries were in a state of collapse, defined as a
decline to less than 10% of their original yield.
Bigger vessels, better nets, and new technology for spotting fish are not
bringing the world's fleets bigger returns - in fact, the global catch fell
by 13% between 1994 and 2003.
Historical records from coastal zones in North America, Europe and Australia
also show declining yields, in step with declining species diversity; these
are yields not just of fish, but of other kinds of seafood too.
Zones of biodiversity loss also tended to see more beach closures, more
blooms of potentially harmful algae, and more coastal flooding.
Experiments performed in small, relatively contained ecosystems show that
reductions in diversity tend to bring reductions in the size and robustness
of local fish stocks. This implies that loss of biodiversity is driving the
declines in fish stocks seen in the large-scale studies.
The final part of the jigsaw is data from areas where fishing has been
banned or heavily restricted.
These show that protection brings back biodiversity within the zone, and
restores populations of fish just outside.
"The image I use to explain why biodiversity is so important is that marine
life is a bit like a house of cards," said Dr Worm.
"All parts of it are integral to the structure; if you remove parts,
particularly at the bottom, it's detrimental to everything on top and
threatens the whole structure.
"And we're learning that in the oceans, species are very strongly linked to
each other - probably more so than on land."
Protected interest
What the study does not do is attribute damage to individual activities such
as over-fishing, pollution or habitat loss; instead it paints a picture of
the cumulative harm done across the board.
Even so, a key implication of the research is that more of the oceans should
be protected.
But the extent of protection is not the only issue, according to Carl Gustaf
Lundin, head of the global marine programme at IUCN, the World Conservation
Union.
"The benefits of marine-protected areas are quite clear in a few cases;
there's no doubt that protecting areas leads to a lot more fish and larger
fish, and less vulnerability," he said.
"But you also have to have good management of marine parks and good
management of fisheries. Clearly, fishing should not wreck the ecosystem,
bottom trawling being a good example of something which does wreck the
ecosystem."
But, he said, the concept of protecting fish stocks by protecting
biodiversity does make sense.
"This is a good compelling case; we should protect biodiversity, and it does
pay off even in simple monetary terms through fisheries yield."
Protecting stocks demands the political will to act on scientific advice -
something which Boris Worm finds lacking in Europe, where politicians have
ignored recommendations to halt the iconic North Sea cod fishery year after
year.
Without a ban, scientists fear the North Sea stocks could follow the Grand
Banks cod of eastern Canada into apparently terminal decline.
"I'm just amazed, it's very irrational," he said.
"You have scientific consensus and nothing moves. It's a sad example; and
what happened in Canada should be such a warning, because now it's collapsed
it's not coming back."
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