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surfstix1963
11-15-2014, 06:46 AM
Salt-Water Fish Extinction Seen By 2048

http://cbsnews1.cbsistatic.com/hub/i/r/2006/11/03/d4d6d51e-a642-11e2-a3f0-029118418759/thumbnail/620x350/6b20f502d74e893957819763cc7a4c5f/image2148120x.jpg
Ocean Fish Pollution Water Sunset CBS/AP

The apocalypse has a new date: 2048.

That's when the world's oceans will be empty of fish, predicts an international team of ecologists and economists. The cause: the disappearance of species due to overfishing, pollution, habitat loss, and climate change.

The study by Boris Worm, PhD, of Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, -- with colleagues in the U.K., U.S., Sweden, and Panama -- was an effort to understand what this loss of ocean species might mean to the world.

The researchers analyzed several different kinds of data. Even to these ecology-minded scientists, the results were an unpleasant surprise.

"I was shocked and disturbed by how consistent these trends are -- beyond anything we suspected," Worm says in a news release.

"This isn't predicted to happen. This is happening now," study researcher Nicola Beaumont, PhD, of the Plymouth Marine Laboratory, U.K., says in a news release.

"If biodiversity continues to decline, the marine environment will not be able to sustain our way of life. Indeed, it may not be able to sustain our lives at all," Beaumont adds.

Already, 29% of edible fish and seafood species have declined by 90% -- a drop that means the collapse of these fisheries.

But the issue isn't just having seafood on our plates. Ocean species filter toxins from the water. They protect shorelines. And they reduce the risks of algae blooms such as the red tide.

"A large and increasing proportion of our population lives close to the coast; thus the loss of services such as flood control and waste detoxification can have disastrous consequences," Worm and colleagues say.

The researchers analyzed data from 32 experiments on different marine environments.

They then analyzed the 1,000-year history of 12 coastal regions around the world, including San Francisco and Chesapeake bays in the U.S., and the Adriatic, Baltic, and North seas in Europe.

Next, they analyzed fishery data from 64 large marine ecosystems.

And finally, they looked at the recovery of 48 protected ocean areas.

Their bottom line: Everything that lives in the ocean is important. The diversity of ocean life is the key to its survival. The areas of the ocean with the most different kinds of life are the healthiest.

But the loss of species isn't gradual. It's happening fast -- and getting faster, the researchers say.

Worm and colleagues call for sustainable fisheries management, pollution control, habitat maintenance, and the creation of more ocean reserves.

This, they say, isn't a cost; it's an investment that will pay off in lower insurance costs, a sustainable fish industry, fewer natural disasters, human health, and more.

"It's not too late. We can turn this around," Worm says. "But less than 1% of the global ocean is effectively protected right now."

Worm and colleagues report their findings in the Nov. 3 issue of Science.


SOURCES: Worm, B. Science, Nov. 3, 2006; vol 314: pp 787-790. News release, SeaWeb. News release, American Association for the Advancement of Science.

cowherder
11-15-2014, 03:48 PM
"This isn't predicted to happen. This is happening now," study researcher Nicola Beaumont, PhD, of the Plymouth Marine Laboratory, U.K., says in a news release.

"If biodiversity continues to decline, the marine environment will not be able to sustain our way of life. Indeed, it may not be able to sustain our lives at all," Beaumont adds.

Already, 29% of edible fish and seafood species have declined by 90% -- a drop that means the collapse of these fisheries.




Well I don't know about all the species but I think the striper numbers are def down a lot. If this keeps up we will have to have dogfish skate and sea robin tournaments because they will be the only things left to fish for in the surf besides bluefish.

Rip-Plugger
11-15-2014, 11:08 PM
I started fishing the salt in 1978 and there were no bass around.
never saw one till 1983 when I and some friends were fishing for tommies we caught lots of them and they were big 12 or so.
then one night we got hard hits and our medium LMB rods bent over double.when landed we were shoicked to find 2lb bass on the size 6 freshwater hooks.
they hit hard all night long and they have been around since.
before they showed,all there were was huge gator bluefish with fish over 20lbs not uncommon.
my best was 22-1/2 lbs and it was nearly 45 inches,huge monster gators that would inhale a big daddy goo-goo eyes swimmer like nothing then chop on it till it had no paint.

jigfreak
11-16-2014, 12:00 AM
I can't speak to whether or not all the fish are disappearing, only to the bass. This is the worst year I have had since the moratorium. I am tired of hearing it blamed on sandy or the beach replenishment. Go to the beach during the day you can see miles of bunker with nothing on them. Does anyone remember when in the spring and fall there were bonafide explosions among the bunker schools. The ones that looked like bombs were exploding out there? Haven't seen that in a while.

surfstix1963
11-16-2014, 04:50 AM
We used to get peanut bunker schools so big the entire shore was brown in color for miles and days on end with big fish on them the EPIC days.I haven't fished a whole hell of a lot this year due to family matters but I do know enough people to hear what's going on and just about everyone of them told me you didn't miss much.Except for some night tides in one particular location on the east end and not Montauk either they had some decent fish on darters.I went seabass fishing and we had cocktail blues 45 miles offshore as a matter of fact from about 20 miles out we saw them busting on top in very small pods of fish.Those days are long gone.