upwelling coastal areas Economy = $ 500 species regularly caught employs 15 million people worldwide In 2005: 137 million tons taken $70 billion.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How fishing gears affect the ecosystem
Advertisements

Water Use.
Fishing Practices.
Honors Marine Biology Ocean Resources Module 15 April 11, 2013.
Fisheries and the World around Us What is a Fishery?What is a Fishery? Why are Fisheries important?Why are Fisheries important? What are the different.
Fisheries.
017 Fisheries.
Chapter 17: Marine Resources. Laws and regulation Mare Liberum Territorial sea 1958 to 1982 UN Law of the Sea Ratified in 1993 International law.
Resources From the Sea1 Fisheries. Resources From the Sea2 Food from the sea The animals that are harvested vary widely from culture to culture Polychaetes,
Ecology B.Species Interactions 1.Intraspecific competition Ex – Competition for algae by sea urchins Ex – Competition for shells by hermit crabs 2.Interspecies.
Marine Pollution. Marine pollution threatens resources Even into the mid-20th century, coastal U.S. cities dumped trash and untreated sewage along their.
Fisheries and Fishing Techniques. What are fisheries? A fishing ground for commercial fishing.
INTRODUCTION TO FISHING
A Brief History of Fishing Back in 1497, when John Cabot arrived on the Eastern Coast of North America there were a lot of fish! Since the 1400’s, Europeans.
Fishery Fishing makes its greatest contribution to the economy when it is harvested as a food source. This is the commercial fishery.
Commercial Fishing CGC1D May 2, 2014.
OVERFISHING PRACTICES GILL NETS DRIFT NETS LONGLINES PURSE SEINE NETS TRAWLERS.
Fisheries and Fishing Techniques. Overfishing What is overfishing? What leads to overfishing?
Dan Minchin Marine Organism Investigations, Ireland Coastal Research and Planning Institute, Univeristy of Klaipeda, Lithuania. September/November 2013.
Sustaining Fisheries and Catching Fish
RESOURCES FROM EARTH’S WATERS
Overfishing and Extinction: Gone Fishing, Fish Gone (1) Fishery: concentration of a particular wild aquatic species suitable for commercial harvesting.
- Source of protein Jobs depend upon fishing related processing industries (canning, freezing) Pet food, fertilizers Boat building, making nets, ice production.
Humans and the Sea -- Fisheries, management, and sampling Millions of people depend on fisheries… in what ways? –Food 86 million tons/year –Jobs –Products.
Marine Food Resources: Fisheries: Highly useful source of human nutrition (about 4% of human protein source) Fishes (sardine, herring, anchovy, mackerel,
Humans and the Sea -- Fisheries, management, and sampling
Fisheries Prepared by - Ms. Uttara Abhyankar
Fish. Characteristics of Fish Skeleton made of bone Air (swim) bladder for buoyancy Mucus to reduce friction, antibacterial agent Gill cover (operculum)
Fisheries in the Seas Fish life cycles: Egg/sperm pelagic larvaejuvenile (first non-feeding – critical period – then feeding) (first non-feeding – critical.
Fishing Methods I got 99 problems, but a fish ain’t one!
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Emptying the Oceans : The state of ocean fisheries Marine protected areas and reserves.
Fisheries Unlike other natural resources such as oil and gas, fish are a renewable resource. People in coastal regions have been using fish as a major.
Oceans 11. What is “fishing”? Exploitation of marine organisms for sustenance, profit, or fun. Examples: –Fish- cod, halibut, salmon, redfish, stripped.
Jurisdiction Marine Pollution International Fishing.
10/3/13 Life’s Work: Read ch. 11 and study for quiz tomorrow Agenda:
Pg. 114 RTW: What is one problem caused by invasive species?  Objective: I will be able to describe methods of commercial fishing and their impact on.
The Fisheries Facts and Figures about Fisheries in Nova Scotia Source: D.F.O.
Commercial Fishing and Fishing Techniques. Oceanography Check-In Focus: What do you notice about the ratio of water to salt in the ocean?
Fisheries Oceans 11 Facts and Figures about Fisheries in Nova Scotia Source: D.F.O.
Fish. Characteristics of Fish Skeleton made of ________ _______________ bladder for buoyancy Mucus to reduce friction, ______________________________.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Benjamin Cummings Fish Harvesting Marine Ecosystems.
Oceans' Vocabulary Unit 4. GROUND FISH  fish that live on, in, or near the bottom of the body of water they inhabit.  Examples –cod, haddock, red fish,
Fisheries Fishing Methods.
Pg. 92 RTW: What is one problem caused by invasive species? Objective: I will be able to describe the consequences of biodiversity due to invasive species.
Georges Bank East Scotian Shelf Grand Banks.
Traditional food production and distribution practices are unable to feed the world’s 7+ billion people Will resources in the sea be able to provide enough.
Traditional food production and distribution practices are unable to feed the world’s 6.3+ billion people Will resources.
Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity
Group 6: Commercial Fishing and Who Owns the Sea? Marine Science Period: 5 Giselle Alvarez Lauren Batista Koset Fabrias Mariam Mesa.
Over-fishing. What is it? Over-fishing occurs when the catch is at a rate greater than natural reproduction can sustain. Worldwide, we are removing 180.
Marine Resources Biological. Initial Questions What proportion of the protein in the human diet comes from the ocean? Where are commercially important.
 Fishing.  Canada’s oldest industry  We have the longest coastline in the world  We have more lakes than the rest of the world combined (60% of all.
Class The Oceans FOOD RESOURCES OF THE OCEANS World Fish Catch Dynamics of fish populations and fishing Over-exploited fisheries Management to get.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 13 Biological Productivity and Energy Transfer Issues That Affect Marine Fisheries.
Fishing Techniques January 11, 2013.
Canada’s Commercial Fishery
Marine Resources: Fisheries Management
Fishing: An Industry in Crisis
FISHERIES fieldandstream.com fao.org
Fisheries and Fishing Techniques
Atlantic Canada-Appalachia
Facts and Figures about Fisheries in Nova Scotia Source: D.F.O.
OVERFISHING PRACTICES
Law of the Sea Convention (LOSC)
Fisheries and the World around Us
OVERFISHING PRACTICES
The Fishery Pp
Fishing: An Industry in Crisis
Fishing: An Industry in Crisis
Land Use Part 3: Food from the Sea
Presentation transcript:

upwelling coastal areas

Economy = $

500 species regularly caught employs 15 million people worldwide In 2005: 137 million tons taken $70 billion

Country ________________________________________ China Peru Japan United States Chile

World per capita consumption of seafood in 2006 = 16.4 kg/yr U.S. per capita consumption of seafood in 2006 = 7.5 kg/yr Problem?

Overfishing Commercial extinction Bycatch (27 million metric tons annually) Targeting smaller species on the low end of the food chain

Harpoon - whales, swordfish, bluefin tuna Pole and line - mahi-mahi and used for tuna extensively in the 50‘s Longline - swordfish, tuna (pelagic); cod, halibut (bottom) Trolling - salmon, albacore, mahi-mahi Drift (gill) netting - various pelagic fish Trawl - anchovies (pelagic); cod, halibut (bottom) Purse seine - sardines, herring, mackerel Traps and Pots - Crabs, lobster, rock fish

Video

Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) nautical miles 2.under direct control of the country that owns the nearest land Allow nations to claim jurisdiction over their territorial seas (contiguous sea beds and their waters that extend off shore by 12 nautical miles) Regulates continental shelf resources: Fishing Mineral exploration Scientific research

Trawling: Bycatch in shrimp trawling is very high (25 to 83% of the catch is discarded), turtles often caught in trawls. SOLUTION: trawls with trap doors to let turtles escape

Purse seine: Tuna known to hang out under pods of dolphins, nets set around pods of dolphins would result in many drowning. SOLUTIONS: Nets not set around dolphin pods and/or employ — “backing down”, a technique that lowers upper edge of net letting dolphins escape

Driftnets: indiscriminate entangling of many sorts of marine animals SOLUTION: banned in oceanic fisheries (but some countries still using them) Long lining: Many albatross drown trying to snatch bait from long lines being deployed. snagged on hooks and pulled under. SOLUTION: deploy in the dark or with special rig to let line out under water.