Fisheries management Fisheries management draws on
fisheries science to enable sustainable exploitation. Modern fisheries management is often defined as mandatory rules based on concrete objectives and a mix of management techniques, enforced by a
monitoring control and surveillance system. • Ideas and rules: Economist
Paul Romer believes
sustainable growth is possible providing the right ideas (technology) are combined with the right rules, rather than simply hectoring fishers. There has been no lack of innovative ideas about how to harvest fish. He characterizes failures as primarily failures to apply appropriate rules. •
Fishing subsidies: Government subsidies influence many of the world fisheries. Operating cost subsidies allow European and Asian
fishing fleets to fish in distant waters, such as West Africa. Many experts reject fishing subsidies and advocate restructuring incentives globally to help struggling fisheries recover. • Economics: Another focus of conservationists is on curtailing detrimental human activities by improving fisheries' market structure with techniques such as salable
fishing quotas, like those set up by the
Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization, or laws such as those listed below. • Valorization of by-catch: helping to avoid discards (and their associated adverse ecological impacts) by valorizing by-catch products, as they are good sources for protein hydrolizates, peptones, enzymatic mixtures or fish oil being these products of interest different industrial sectors. •
Payment for Ecosystem Services: Environmental economist Essam Y Mohammed argues that by creating direct economic incentives, whereby people are able to receive payment for the services their property provides, will help to establish sustainable fisheries around the world as well as inspire conservation where it otherwise would not. • Sustainable fisheries certification: A promising direction is the independent certification programs for sustainable fisheries conducted by organizations such as the
Marine Stewardship Council and
Friend of the Sea. These programs work at raising consumer awareness and insight into the nature of their seafood purchases. • Ecosystem based fisheries: See next section
Ecosystem based fisheries According to
marine ecologist Chris Frid, the
fishing industry points to
marine pollution and
global warming as the causes of recent, unprecedented declines in fish populations. Frid counters that
overfishing has also altered the way the
ecosystem works:Everybody would like to see the rebuilding of fish stocks and this can only be achieved if we understand all of the influences, human and natural, on fish dynamics. ... fish communities can be altered in a number of ways, for example they can decrease if particular-sized individuals of a species are targeted, as this affects
predator and prey dynamics. Fishing, however, is not the sole cause of changes to
marine life—pollution is another example.... No one factor operates in isolation and components of the ecosystem respond differently to each individual factor.The traditional approach to fisheries science and management has been to focus on a single species. This can be contrasted with the
ecosystem-based approach. Ecosystem-based fishery concepts have been implemented in some regions. In a 2007 effort to "stimulate much needed discussion" and "clarify the essential components" of ecosystem-based fisheries science, a group of scientists offered the following
ten commandments for ecosystem-based fisheries scientists: {{Blockquote| • Keep a perspective that is holistic, risk-averse and adaptive. • Maintain an "old growth" structure in fish populations, since big, old and fat female fish have been shown to be the best spawners, but are also susceptible to overfishing. • Characterize and maintain the natural spatial structure of fish stocks, so that management boundaries match natural boundaries in the sea. • Monitor and maintain seafloor habitats to make sure fish have food and shelter. • Maintain resilient ecosystems that are able to withstand occasional shocks. • Identify and maintain critical food-web connections, including predators and forage species. • Adapt to ecosystem changes through time, both short-term and on longer cycles of decades or centuries, including global climate change. • Account for evolutionary changes caused by fishing, which tends to remove large, older fish. • Include the actions of humans and their social and economic systems in all ecological equations.
Marine protected areas Strategies and techniques for marine conservation tend to combine theoretical disciplines, such as population biology, with practical conservation strategies, such as setting up protected areas, as with
Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) or
Voluntary Marine Conservation Areas. Each nation defines MPAs independently, but they commonly involve increased protection for the area from fishing and other threats. Marine life is not evenly distributed in the oceans. Most of the really valuable ecosystems are in relatively shallow coastal waters, above or near the
continental shelf, where the sunlit waters are often nutrient rich from
land runoff or
upwellings at the continental edge, allowing photosynthesis, which energizes the lowest trophic levels. In the 1970s, for reasons more to do with
oil drilling than with fishing, the U.S. extended its jurisdiction, then 12 miles from the coast, to 200 miles. This made huge shelf areas part of its territory. Other nations followed, extending national control to what became known as the
exclusive economic zone (EEZ). This move has had many implications for fisheries conservation, since it means that most of the most productive maritime ecosystems are now under national jurisdictions, opening possibilities for protecting these ecosystems by passing appropriate laws.
Daniel Pauly characterises marine protected areas as "a conservation tool of revolutionary importance that is being incorporated into the fisheries mainstream."
Sustainable Fish Farming Over the years, fish farming has made a name for itself in the fishing industry as a means of ensuring that the world's fish supplies do not deplete so rapidly. Sometimes referred to as "aquaculture", fish farming, when done right,
can be one a very environmentally-friendly way to harvest fish. Fish farms are regulated by laws and management plans, which prevents it from falling prey to the same phenomenon of overfishing, which cripples the fish populations and marine ecosystem as a whole. The basic premise of fish farming is just what it sounds like—to breed and raise fish in enclosed environments, then eventually sell the grown fish as food for consumers. Salmon, cod, and halibut are three types of finfish that are often farm-raised. The actual enclosures in which the fish grow and swim are made of mesh "cages" submerged underwater. Because they are not catching the fish out in the open ocean, fish farmers are able to control the environment in which the fish exist. Sustainable fish farming practices do not use dangerous chemicals, hormones, or antibiotics on their fish, which benefits the surrounding marine environment, and the human consumers themselves. In addition to this, sustainable fish farming is able to control what their fish eat: farmers will take care to keep the fish's diet healthy and balanced. Conversely, one of the most unsustainable practices within the fish farming industry occurs is when farmers feed the fish pellets of animal waste. The quality of ocean water in and around fish farms is up to the farmers to maintain, and due to the fact that the mesh cages take up only a certain amount of space in the ocean, fish farmers can ensure that waste and other byproducts are not polluting the water. Everything from fish oils to fish skin may be incorporated into something new: for example, fish oils can become a beneficiary supplement for both animals and humans.
Laws and treaties International laws and treaties related to
marine conservation include the 1966
Convention on Fishing and Conservation of Living Resources of the High Seas.
United States laws related to marine conservation include the 1972
Marine Mammal Protection Act, as well as the 1972
Marine Protection, Research and Sanctuaries Act which established the
National Marine Sanctuaries program.
Magnuson-Stevens Fishery Conservation and Management Act.
Reconciling fisheries with conservation on bear and river ecosystems. At the Fourth World Fisheries Congress in 2004,
Daniel Pauly asked, "How can fisheries science and conservation biology achieve a reconciliation?", then answered his own question, "By accepting each other's essentials: that fishing should remain a viable occupation; and that aquatic ecosystems and their biodiversity are allowed to persist." A relatively new concept is relationship farming. This is a way of operating farms so they restore the
food chain in their area. Re-establishing a healthy food chain can result in the farm automatically filtering out impurities from feed water and air, feeding its own food chain, and additionally producing high net yields for harvesting. An example is the large ranch
Veta La Palma in Spain's
Guadalquivir Marshes, which for some years had a productive fishery. Relationship farming was first made popular by
Joel Salatin who created a 220 hectare relationship farm featured prominently in
Michael Pollan's book ''
The Omnivore's Dilemma (2006) and the documentary films, Food, Inc. and Fresh''. The basic concept of relationship farming is to put effort into building a healthy food chain, and then the food chain does the hard work.
Awareness campaigns Various organizations promote sustainable fishing strategies, educate the public and stakeholders, and lobby for conservation law and policy. The list includes the Marine Conservation Biology Institute and
Blue Frontier Campaign in the U.S., The U.K.'s Frontier (The Society for Environmental Exploration) and
Marine Conservation Society,
Australian Marine Conservation Society,
International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES),
Langkawi Declaration,
Oceana,
PROFISH, and the
Sea Around Us Project,
International Collective in Support of Fishworkers,
World Forum of Fish Harvesters and Fish Workers, Frozen at Sea Fillets Association and
CEDO. Some organizations certify fishing industry players for sustainable or good practices, such as the
Marine Stewardship Council and
Friend of the Sea. Other organizations offer advice to members of the public who eat with an eye to sustainability. According to the marine conservation biologist
Callum Roberts, four criteria apply when choosing seafood: • Is the species in trouble in the wild where the animals were caught? • Does fishing for the species damage ocean habitats? • Is there a large amount of
bycatch taken with the target species? • Does the fishery have a problem with discards—generally, undersized animals caught and thrown away because their market value is low? The following organizations have download links for wallet-sized cards, listing good and bad choices: •
Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch, USA •
Blue Ocean Institute, USA •
Marine Conservation Society, UK •
Australian Marine Conservation Society • The Southern African Sustainable Seafood Initiative
Global goals The United Nations
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) include, as goal number 7: target 2, the intention to "reduce
biodiversity loss, achieving, by 2010, a significant reduction in the rate of loss", including improving fisheries management to reduce depletion of fish stocks. In 2015, the MDGs then evolved to become the
Sustainable Development Goals with
Goal 14 aimed at conserving life below water. Its Target 14.7 states that "By 2030, increase the economic benefits to small island developing States and least developed countries from the sustainable use of marine resources, including through sustainable management of fisheries, aquaculture and tourism". ==Data issues==