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Little Fish Exploding in Number, Models Show

Posted by Will Ramos on Tuesday, March 1st, 2011 at 8:35 am
Filed under: Discovery,News & Resources
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Sailfish hunt sardines, one of the prey species that models suggest are expanding in number.

Prey species are growing as predators are wiped out.

There are still plenty of fish in the sea—they’re just the little ones, new models suggest.

(From National Geographic / by Charles Choi) — While the past century has seen large predatory fish, such as cod and tuna, plummet by two-thirds, small prey fish, such as sardines and anchovies, have more than doubled in number, the research shows.

Overfishing of larger species has led to an explosion of smaller prey fish—what fisheries scientist Villy Christensen calls a “‘when the cats are away, the mice will play’ effect.”

Although a spike in tiny fish might seem good for fisheries, “only some of these species can be exploited,” noted Christensen, of the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. (See pictures of overfishing in National Geographic magazine.)

“In many cases, these are small species there is very little interest in, except maybe for fish feed or fish oil.”

Fish Crashes Due to Overharvesting

Christensen and his colleagues analyzed more than 200 models of marine ecosystems from around the world to estimate fish numbers between 1880 and 2007. They found that 54 percent of the decline in predatory fish populations had occurred in the past 40 years.

“Cod in the North Atlantic is a classic case of a crash,” he said. “You had hundreds of years of sustainable fishing of cod—on the order of 200,000 to 300,000 tons caught a season—and then we saw an increase up to 700,000 tons, beyond sustainable levels.

“Now it’s been 20 years and we still haven’t seen a recovery.”

(Related: “Seafloor Fish Nearly Wiped Out off U.K.”)

Christensen noted that some might say a two-thirds decline in large fish is exactly what is needed for fishing at maximum sustainable yield.

“That is correct,” he noted. However, their estimates are likely conservative, and “we see no indication that the decline has stopped.”

Big Fish Decline Creating Imbalance

Additionally, the boom in small fish may just add to a natural imbalance left by the absence of the bigger fish.

“Systems where predators have been decimated tend to be unstable,” said Christensen, who presented the unpublished results February 18 at an American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in Washington, D.C.

“Without predators, there is no one to weed out the sick and weak individuals, and we know from terrestrial systems that this often causes crash-boom situations.”

(Watch a video about the global fish decline.)

A lack of large predators leads “to less biologically diverse ecosystems [that] become much less resilient to pressures such as pollution, climate change, or changes in [ocean] currents or food supply,” said Jacqueline Alder, coordinator of the marine and coastal branch of the U.N. Environment Programme.

“We might need a shift in mindset to think of fish as a scarce resource rather than a global commons,” said Alder, who did not take part in the study.

Climate Change May Affect Fish

A key focus of such models should be understanding how fish might be affected by global warming, Alder added.

“Simple models of climate change suggest fish might move to cooler latitudes, and we don’t know how predator-prey relationships will get altered by these changes in the ranges of these fish,” Alder explained.

“We also know that a rise in temperature has an effect on how much pollution some species take up, and that can eventually go up the food chain to affect us.”


Related Posts:

  • NOAA Awards $73.6 Million Recovery Act Contract for New Fisheries Survey Vessel
  • Damage to Threatened Gulf of California Habitats Can be Reversed
  • An Index for Ocean Health
  • Loss of Large Predators Has Caused Widespread Disruption of Ecosystems
  • Scientists Discover Animal-like Urea Cycle in Tiny Diatoms in the Ocean

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