A lot of fishermen are in despair about the situation, but how many of them acknowledge that they themselves collectively put themselves in this situation?
In the UK there had been massive pushback against fishing quotas, but it seems like none of them realised that without quotas the north sea would be quickly depleted.
You would think this to be shortsightedness or outright stupidity... Until you realize, that depleting your fish stock quickly and putting the resulting wealth into the stock market will yield higher total wealth than fishing sustainably. While small time fishermen in question might not be thinking in these terms, these conclusions do get reflected into their reality. E.g. via observing what does the corporate fishing do.
I know this is anecdotal, but... :
I've been staying at a little fisher's village in Pelion (Greece) during summer for the last 13 years and yes, it is a dire situation, worsening year over year. Local fishermen are basically in despair, because close to the coast everything's depleted and they cannot reach the (already scarce) fishing grounds further off the coast with their type of boats. Their livelihodd is pretty much destroyed.
Saw the MedFish4Ever initiative mentioned on the page, but clicking the link yields a "requested page could not be found". Go figure...
Yes, I feel the same way, sometimes I hope I'm just really pessimistic but I wouldn't be surprised if humanity would be the first organism that could predict it's own extinction without actually doing something about it.
As a fellow Michigander involved with the West Michigan Walleye club and our fish pond here in GR, fish stocking cannot fix overfishing and habitat destruction. We stock cool and cold-water breeding species like walleye, pike, trout, and salmon because their breeding areas have been destroyed.
The process turns a productive, diverse pond and stream system into a monocrop so we can still have walleye for sportfishing in a select few lakes. It can help the species survive until we can get our heads on straight; it's not ecologically healthier than the natural state.
Some do but oceanic fish can be much harder to breed in captivity, than their fresh water relatives are. There have been some successes such as the striped sea bass hybrid:
That being said, many oceanic fish such as the Snook, Snappers and Groupers are not as simple, there are some promising results from a few areas in concerns to these species but most of them center around farm pens in the ocean. so not really brooding and rearing them in on shore artificial salt ponds which would be far more cost effective.
Great for recreational "I'm going fishing this weekend", but I'd imagine it'd be a drop in the bucket where commercial fishing is concerned. A single ship might catch millions of fish in one go.
Yes. Many lakes around here (Alberta, Canada) have stocked lakes where fish didn't even naturally live. Many lakes are also home to commercial fish stocks. Then there's also actual closed system fish farms.
The main issue with fish farming is that in some parts of the world more desirable fish are fed fish meal from ocean-caught fish (SMH)...
I've cut down my fish consumption considerably after reading similar headlines a few years ago. Luckily, there's a lot of plant-based options available.
Can't wait until proper food gets too expensive for the working class scum. They are the ones fighting all the climate change initiatives - it will be a fair ending if they munch down on GMO corn and insect sandwiches while I'll be able to afford fish, steaks, organic chicken, etc.
[+] [-] ourlordcaffeine|6 years ago|reply
In the UK there had been massive pushback against fishing quotas, but it seems like none of them realised that without quotas the north sea would be quickly depleted.
[+] [-] lrem|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] subhero|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] turk73|6 years ago|reply
[deleted]
[+] [-] rblion|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mathieubordere|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jayess|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] LeifCarrotson|6 years ago|reply
The process turns a productive, diverse pond and stream system into a monocrop so we can still have walleye for sportfishing in a select few lakes. It can help the species survive until we can get our heads on straight; it's not ecologically healthier than the natural state.
[+] [-] kls|6 years ago|reply
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hybrid_striped_bass
That being said, many oceanic fish such as the Snook, Snappers and Groupers are not as simple, there are some promising results from a few areas in concerns to these species but most of them center around farm pens in the ocean. so not really brooding and rearing them in on shore artificial salt ponds which would be far more cost effective.
[+] [-] ceejayoz|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Mikeb85|6 years ago|reply
The main issue with fish farming is that in some parts of the world more desirable fish are fed fish meal from ocean-caught fish (SMH)...
[+] [-] watertom|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] elektor|6 years ago|reply
https://goodcatchfoods.com/
[+] [-] mathieubordere|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] herogreen|6 years ago|reply
[+] [-] HgonnaH|6 years ago|reply