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2011 Final Exam Review. Hugo Grotius Mare Liberum 1609 Whales Norwegian herring Peruvian anchovy Can. N. Atlantic cod Technology Capital Investment.

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Presentation on theme: "2011 Final Exam Review. Hugo Grotius Mare Liberum 1609 Whales Norwegian herring Peruvian anchovy Can. N. Atlantic cod Technology Capital Investment."— Presentation transcript:

1 2011 Final Exam Review

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3 Hugo Grotius Mare Liberum 1609 Whales Norwegian herring Peruvian anchovy Can. N. Atlantic cod Technology Capital Investment Fisheries Information Politics Social Issues Tragedy of commons Population

4 Inexhaustible  Exhaustible Forces Tools of Collection Increased Demand Increased Supply Humans’ Rules Present Status Climate Change Issues How oceans make fish Why not more Where are fish from Management Principals Fisheries Examples Aquaculture Health Issues

5 Hawaiian Fisheries History of Pelagics Coastal Fisheries Issues Precious Corals Ciguatera Marine Debris Biofuels

6 Some effects of atmospheric circulation cells Wet climate and low pressure in the vicinity of the equator and 60 o latitude Dry climate and high pressure in the vicinity of 30 o latitude

7 OCEANIC GYRES

8 Upwelling Area Fisheries

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11 How the Oceans Make Fish Primary Production  Commercial Fish 3 Types of Ocean Areas –Open Ocean –Coastal Areas –Upwelling Areas

12 Open Ocean Area Deep Low inputs Mostly Regen. Nutrs. Stable Temporally Nutrient Limited Small Phytoplankton Long Food Chains Low Comm.Fish Yield

13 Coastal Areas Shallow Seasonal Inputs Seasonal Variability ~50% New Nutrients Larger Phytoplankton Shorter Food Chains Benthic Food Chains Gadoid fishes High Comm. Fish Yield

14 Upwelling Areas Shallow Seasonal Inputs Seasonally Steady Mostly New Nutrients Larger Phytoplankton Short Food Chains Clupeid fish High Comm. Fish Yield

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16 Total Global Fisheries Harvest ~160Mt YearCAPAQ 200294.552 200391.855.2 20049660 200595.563.3 200693.166.7 Capture Fisheries are constant at ~90- 95Mt Aquaculture is steadily increasing

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19 19 Seafood – Nutritional Benefits High quality protein High in omega-3 fatty acids Low in saturated fat Contributes to a healthy heart Contributes to proper growth and development of children Source of vitamins and minerals

20 20 Proper Growth and Development of Children Omega-3s and pregnancy –During last trimester of pregnancy Rapid synthesis of brain tissue Omega-3s and premature infants –Risk factor for preterm delivery and low birth weight Omega-3s and the newborn –DHA is influenced by the mother’s diet

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22 What is the difference between OCEAN FISH and PILOT WHALE?

23 Ciguatera Fish Poisoning Occurs in tropical and subtropical regions Vector is primarily reef fish Affects hundreds of thousands of people annually Underreported; misdiagnosed

24 Ciguatera Sequence Environmental conditions  Gambierdiscus Fish  Humans Gambierdiscus  Macroalgae  Herbivorous Fish  Carnivorous Fish  Fishing Pressure

25 Reported Ciguatera Incidents Hawaii – 1963 to 2005 N = 676

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27 r’s & K’s CharacteristicsOrganisms

28 II. Major Fisheries - by Fish THE FIRST TIER Peruvian Anchovy Alaskan Pollock Skipjack Tuna Capelin

29 IV. Major Fisheries - by Ocean Atlantic Pacific Indian Other 25.6% 62.6% 10% 1.7

30 Lessons From Historical Fisheries Canadian Atlantic Cod Hawaiian Lobster Alaskan Pollack Norwegian Spring-Spawning Herring Atlantic Bluefin Tuna Orange Roughy Northwestern Bigeye Tuna

31 U.S. Importation Context 2010: ~80% Seafood Imported Top 3: Shrimp, Salmon Tuna

32 Hawaii Importation 60:40 imported : domestic Sources –China, Australia, Japan, Taiwan, Philippines, New Zealand –#1fish consumed: Salmon –#1 fish consumed (w/ rec. fish’g): YF Tuna

33 Mislabeling/Substitution Recent Study: 48% e/c of U.S. mainland –134 restaurants & retail outlets Reasons: long supply chains, species indistinguishable visually Causes: Fraud, ignorance, lack of regulations Victims: consumers, U.S. fishermen DNA application for identification

34 Unraveling a Fish Myth

35 Pervasive rhetoric: …aquaculture takes 2-5 lbs of wild fish to produce 1 lb of farmed fish. If you do the math, this isn’t sustainable.” Back to basic biology

36 Unraveling a Fish Myth TE in Aquaculture [Avg. 40-60%] WHY? –Nutritional profile of pelleted feeds –Little energy expended hunting for food –Bite-sized pellets size means little waste –Also, no by-catch waste –AQ feeds now 10-25% fish meal

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38 Fishing at 15% of MSY Fishing at 75% of MSYFishing at 100% of MSY

39 The Canadian Cod Example: Fished to Commercial Extinction Before Establishment of a Moratorium: No Recovery of the Stock, No Recovery of the Fishery

40 During the 1980s cod catches remained steady but that was because larger, more powerful and sophisticated vessels were chasing the few remaining fish.

41 During the 1980s cod catches remained steady but that was because larger, more powerful and sophisticated vessels were chasing the few remaining fish. Working harder and harder, to catch the few remaining cod.

42 "In normal years we'd get 200,000 pounds of cod, but that year it was more like 70,000 pounds. Then all of a sudden they just crashed." Fisheries scientists concluded that quotas had to be more than halved in order to prevent this stock's collapse. Politicians were appalled; the proposed quotas would have caused economic chaos throughout Eastern Canada. So the politicians compromised what could not be compromised. Quotas were cut by only 10 percent. Fishermen tried as hard as they could, but could only catch 122,000 of the 190,000-ton cod quota for 1991. The estimated combined weight of the adult cod population was a mere 1.1 percent of its historic levels of the early 1960s.

43 ECONOMICS Law of Diminishing Returns

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45 Reasons to Fish Below the MSY I. Inaccurate Information A. I Fish Therefore I Lie (Schaefer Model) B. Not Enough Biological Data (Beverton-Holt Model) II.Variable Recruitment III. Resource Mismatch IV.Presence of Competitors V.Stock Stability VI.Economics (Law of Diminishing Returns) I.T

46 Up to 20 cm in length

47 Peruvian Anchoveta Fishery I. The Physical Setting II.The Upwelling Ecosystem III.Anchoveta Ecology IV.History of the Anchoveta Fishery V.Managing the Anchoveta Fishery

48 Mortality

49 Effects of El Niño on Anchoveta Catch

50 Bluefin tuna

51 Table 7.2. Pertinent information on commercially important tuna species SpeciesLength (cm) Weight (kg) Age of sexual maturity (years) Lifespan (years) Albacore60-9010-20510 Bigeye80-18015-20410 Skipjack30-808-10212 Yellowfin40-1805-20310 Atlantic bluefin 45-450135-6804-815-30 Pacific bluefin150-300300-555630 Southern bluefin 200 8-1240

52 Table 10.5. Some characteristics of Humpback Whales. Age of sexual maturity (years) Lifespan (years) 4-780-90 The industry killed roughly 4,000-6,000 humpback whales per year between 1935 and 1965, with a hiatus during World War II. The killing finally stopped in 1966 when the IWC agreed to a moratorium on humpback whaling. At that time, the humpback population numbered about 20,000. The virgin stock of humpbacks is estimated to have been about 115,000 whales. Humpback whales are recovering from the effects of whaling more strongly than any other of the great whale species. Currently the stock numbers about 35,000 whales, 11,600 in the North Atlantic, 7,000 in the North Pacific, and at least 17,000 in the Southern Ocean.

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55 Products from Marine Biodiscovery Pharmaceuticals Fluorescent Proteins Thermostable Enzymes Laundry Detergent

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59 AB CD E Grey Whale Carcass, 6 weeks on the bottom, 1675 metres Mobile Scavenger Stage

60 Oil From Algae Why Do We Want (Need!) To Do This? Ecological Necessity Economic Necessity Intellectual Challenge

61 Marine Algae Compelling Advantages Algae Consume CO 2, a Major Greenhouse Gas Do Not Use Fresh Water Do Not Require Arable Land Grow Very Rapidly Represent a “New” Source of Fuel* Represent a New Source of Animal Food *Historical Footnote - Most of Our “Old” Fuels (i.e., Fossil Fuels) Were Produced by: MARINE ALGAE! Bigelow Laboratory Phytopia

62 Reported yields for biomass crops Rapeseed Palmoil Jatropha Microalgae Soya Biomass (Mt/ha/yr) Oil-content (% dry mass) Bio- diesel (Mt/ha/yr) Bio-diesel (bbl/ha/yr) 1-2.520%0.2-0.51.4-3.5 340%1.28.2 1920%3.726.4 7.5-1030-50%2.2-5.316-38 140-25535-65%86.6350-700 Note: 1Mt bio-diesel equals 1,136 litres

63 Law of the Sea 1493 to 1958 Inter catera Treaty of Tordesillas Truman Proclamations Latin American Claims 2.1958 to present Cod Wars Latin American Declarations UNCLOSs 3. Consequences

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66 Montevideo, Lima, and Santo Domingo Declarations (1970-1972) Latin American Nations Come to a Regional Consensus on 12-Mile Territorial Seas and 200-Mile “Patrimonial” Seas

67 3rd Cod War, 1975 Iceland extends its exclusion zone to 200 miles

68 Important agreements reached at UNCLOS III Every State has the right to establish the breadth of its territorial sea up to a limit not exceeding 12 nautical miles. Contiguous zone up to 24 nautical miles from the shoreline for purposes of enforcement of customs, fiscal, immigration, or sanitary laws. Exclusive economic zone up to 200 nautical miles from the shoreline for purposes of exploring and exploiting, conserving and managing the natural resources, whether living or non-living, of the waters superjacent to the sea-bed and of the sea-bed and its subsoil. The resources of the seabed and ocean floor and subsoil thereof beyond the limits of national jurisdiction are the common heritage of mankind. An International Seabed Authority will organize, carry out, and control activities associated with the exploitation of the resources of the international seabed. A parallel system will be established for exploring and exploiting the international seabed, one involving private and state ventures and the other involving the Authority. A so-called Enterprise will carry out activities in the international seabed for the Authority and will be responsible for transporting, processing, and marketing minerals recovered from the international seabed.

69 Consequences 1.12-Mile Territorial Sea 2.200-Mile Exclusive Economic Zone 3.Rights of Innocent Passage


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