10% - Observatorio Islas del Rosario y San Bernardo

Transcripción

10% - Observatorio Islas del Rosario y San Bernardo
Ordenación pesquera en el Área Marina
Protegida de los archipiélagos de Rosario y
San Bernardo AMP-ARSB
Módulo 4: Pesca responsable, ordenamiento pesquero y
consumo responsable
Jairo Altamar
[email protected]
4.1 Estado actual de la pesca en Colombia y el mundo.
4.2 Impacto de la pesca en los ecosistemas acuáticos (Generalidades; efectos
directos e indirectos; Formulación de políticas usando los rankings de severidad
de impactos colaterales de los artes de pesca.
4.3 Código de conducta para la pesca responsable de la FAO (Principios
generales y objetivos; análisis de la aplicación e impacto desde 1995; análisis de
citación del código.
4.4 Ordenamiento pesquero (qué es?, cuales son los principios operativos,
quien es el responsable; planes, medidas y estrategias de ordenación; algunas
consideraciones principales. Estudio de caso para AMP o AME).
4.5 Eco-etiquetado y Consumo Responsable (Alcance, principios,
consideraciones generales, requisitos sustantivos mínimos y criterios para las
ecoetiquetas; estudio de caso).
Estado actual de la pesca en Colombia y el mundo
Part 1: Explorers and
exploiters in the age of plenty
Part 2: The modern era of
industrial fishing
?
Part 3: The
future ocean
or
?
Commercial fishing has a very
long history
Coryphaena hippurus
7 + 5 fish
Boy 120 cm or 150 cm?
Santorini, 1600 BC
Coryphaena hippurus
A sea fishing revolution
can be detected in English
archaeological midden
deposits around AD 1050
Sea fishing emerged as
a result of the world’s
first fishery crisis
The sea fishing revolution
coincided with a time of
profound change in Medieval
freshwaters
Mills proliferated in Medieval Europe: from a
couple of hundred around 880 AD, to 5624
listed in the Domesday book of 1085 AD
More fish than water…
Jamestown, Chesapeake Bay
“Heaven and earth seemed never to have agreed better to
frame a piece for man’s commodious and delightful
habitation.”
Captain John Smith, 1608
Explorers then exploiters:
William Dampier (1697) New
Voyage Round the World
writing of the seals of the isle of
Juan Fernandez, far off the
Chilean coast
“Here there are always thousands
[of seals], I might say millions of
them, either sitting on the bays, or
going and coming in the sea round
the island, which is covered with
them (as they lie at the top of the
water playing and sunning
themselves) for a mile or two from
the shore….A blow on the nose
soon kills them. Large ships might
here load themselves with sealskins, and Trane-oyl [oil extracted
from blubber]; for they are
extraordinary fat.”
“…whales, grampusses, and other fish of a monstrous bulk, are in such numbers off
the coast of Patagonia that they were really offensive to us very often. For they would
come sometimes so close to us as to stifle us with their stench when they blew, and
would lie so near us that I have frequently thought it impossible to escape striking
upon them on every send of a sea.”
George Shelvocke 1726
In the 18th century,
whaling and sealing
became the first
global industries
Zane Grey
Cocos Island 1925
“In unimaginable numbers, from
one edge to the other, [groupers]
haunt the rocky ledges of coast and
islands. If a jigger is trolled at a
speed of about four miles an hour
over the proper bottom there is no
question of catching something, the
only gamble is in species and size.
The slogan ‘a ton an hour’ can
often be bettered.”
Griffing Bancroft 1932
Gulf of California
Totoaba: Gulf of California
Three trawling
Revolutions
1376 – the beam
trawl is invented
1880s – trawlers gain steam
power
Late 20th century – the
deep sea comes within
reach of the trawl
The endlessly repeating story of commercial
fishing:
Opportunity or necessity drives fishery expansion
Fishing gets harder and drives technological advance
Technology and fishing effort outstrip the productivity
of fish populations
Population decline forces progressive switching to
less valued species
Intense fishing degrades and destroys habitat, further
compromising productivity and fuelling greater effort
Overview
•
•
•
•
The status of global fisheries
Ecosystem impacts of fisheries
Causes for overfishing
Possible solutions
The Status of Global Fisheries
Crisis de las pesquerías
Argumento
Ludwig et al. (1993) Science 260:17,36
La historia de la explotación de recursos indica que son
inevitablemente sobreexplotados, a menudo al punto del
colapso o la extinción.
Contra-argumento
Rosenberg et al. (1993) Science 262:828-829
El uso sostenible es un objetivo aceptado y alcanzable
para el manejo de los recursos renovables  Cubrir las
necesidades del presente sin comprometer necesidades
de generaciones futuras.
Crisis de las pesquerías
Comunidades de peces depredadores mundiales
Myers y Worm (2003) Nature 423: 280-283
Crisis de las pesquerías
Tiburones del Atlántico Noroccidental
Martillo
Blanco
Zorro
Azul
Baum et al. (2003) Science 299: 389-392
Tintorera
costeros
Mako oceánicos
150 Years of Newfoundland Cod Fishery
A typical Fishery..
100
Percent
Fully exploited
Developing
50
Overfished
Collapsed
or closed
Undeveloped
10
0
1950
1960
1970
Years
1980
1990
2000
Froese and Kesner-Reyes, ICES 2002
Trends in Global Fisheries
100%
Percent of World Fisheries
26%
22%
5.1 years
31%
80%
Collapsed
4.1 years
Overfished
5.0 years
Fully exploited
60%
38%
Developing
4.3 years
40%
20%
0%
1951
Undeveloped
?
1956
1961
1966
1971
Froese and Kesner-Reyes, ICES 2002
1976
Years
1981
1986
1991
1996
More & More Collapsed stocks
Froese et al. 2013
Out of New Stocks in 2020
45
40
y = 24.27 - 0.4761 x
r2 = 0.4780
Number of new stocks
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
1970
1980
1990
2000
Year
2010
2020
Froese et al. 2008, Marine Policy
Reality Check in 2012
Froese et al. 2012, Marine Biology
Stocks (%)
Out of Current Stocks in 2048 ?
Worm et al., Science 2006
2048 ?
Where Do Most of the Catches
Come From?
0
China grossly over-reported its marine
fisheries catches throughout the 1990s …
Watson y Pauly (2001) Nature 414: 534-536
(t/km2)
Biomass of Table Fish in 1900
Christensen et al. 2003
Christensen et al. 2003
and in 2000….
Catch per 100 Hooks
1952 - 1980
Blue Marlin
Swordfish
Bluefin Tuna
Dolphinfish
Crisis de las pesquerías
Comunidades de peces depredadores mundiales
1958
peces/100 anzuelos
5º X 5º
1980
Myers y Worm (2003) Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Source: Myers and Worm 2003.
Nature 423: 280-283
Overfishing in the North Atlantic
Trends from
‘Working Group’
reports by fisheries
scientists in
government agencies
(NMFS, DFO,
DIFMAR,
IFREMER, etc.),
compiled by R. A.
Myers.
In Summary
• Global fisheries have drastically reduced
the size of their target stocks, typically by
90% since 1950.
Ecosystem Impacts of Fisheries
Impact on the Sea Floor
before
after
Photos: Dr. K. Sainsbury, CSIRO
Area in NZ accessed by Scallop Trawlers
Before
Area in NZ accessed by Scallop Trawlers
Immediately after first trawling
Area in NZ accessed by Scallop Trawlers
Three years later (Dayton 1998)
Tracks of Trawls
courtesy F. Grassle
Shrimp Trawlers from Space
QuickBird satellite on 20 February 2003, off the coast of
Jiangsu province near the mouth of the Yangtze River;
And More Trawling for Shrimps…
Not only in China, also in Texas
Here: shrimp
trawlers off the
Texas Coast,
Gulf of Mexico
Photo courtesy of Dr.
Kyle van Houten
(Duke University)
Ecosystem Effects of Fishing
4
≅
10%
3
2
1
≅ 10%
..
. . . . . . ≅. 10%
*.
. .*. .
*. . . *. . . . .
*
*. *. *. . *.
.
...
Fishing Down Food Webs
TL of landings
3,4
Marine
3,3
3,2
3,1
3,0
Freshwater
2,9
2,8
2,7
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
Pauly et al. (Science, 1998)
Crisis de las pesquerías
Efecto de las pesquerías
sobre el ecosistema
Posibles cambios de la
fauna íctica en el holoceno
tardío
Parrish (1995) Naga 18(3): 7-9
Crisis de las pesquerías
Arrecifes de coral
Antes de la pesca
Jackson et al (2001) Science 293: 629-638
Después de la pesca
Crisis de las pesquerías
Manejo basado en el ecosistema
Consenso de la necesidad de aproximaciones integrales para el uso y
manejo de recursos marinos.
Forzantes
abióticos
•Evitar
degradación
ecosistema
•Considerar
requerimientos
de otros
componentes
Pikitch et al. 2004. Science 305:345-347
Fisheries-induced
Unnatural Selection
• Fishing removes large, old, highly fecund,
‘fit’ fishes before they can reproduce
• Reductions in size and age at first maturity
are visible in most stocks
• Stocks adapted to fishing become less well
adapted to their natural environment
• Recovery will take long, leaving a
‘Darwinian debt’ to future fishers and
consumers
Diekmann et al. 2009, ICES Insight
In Summary…
• Global fisheries have severe negative
impact on the marine ecosystem
Causes for Overfishing
• Crash course in fisheries management
– Three types of overfishing
Fisheries Management Basics
MSY
8000
Catch in kg and Value/Cost in €
MEY
6000
Cost of fishing
€ Growth
overfishing
€
€
Economic
overfishing
4000
Fpa
Recruitment
overfishing
Flim
2000
?
†
0
0
20
40
60
Fishing Effort (hours)
80
100
EU Fisheries Management
MSY
8000
Catch in kg and Value/Cost in €
MEY
Cost of fishing
€
6000
€
€
4000
Subsidies
Flim
2000
?
†
0
0
20
40
60
Fishing Effort (hours)
80
100
Causes for Overfishing
• Crash course in fisheries management
– Three types of overfishing
– Subsidies increase overfishing
– Overfishing decreases mean size of fish
Catching Baby Fish
Babyfisch in Nordseefängen 2000 - 2004
100
90
82 %
Prozent Babyfisch im Fang (%)
80
70
61 %
60
54 %
55 %
Seelachs
Scholle
50
40
36 %
32 %
30
20
18 %
10
0
Makrele
Seezunge
Hering
Schellfisch
Kabeljau
Quelle: ICES Report on the Assessment of Demersal
Stocks in the North Sea and Skagerrak 2005
Causes for Overfishing
• Mismanagement
• Subsidies
• Misinformation
The Fecundity Myth
“In theory, one pair of cod is enough to replenish
the North Sea cod stock…”
Fact : No relationship between fecundity and
reproductive success
Possible Solutions
Solution: Reduce Reduction
Eat Anchovies, Sardines, Mackerels…
Solution: MPAs
WPC: World Park Congress
CBD: Convention on Biological Diversity
Wood et al. (submitted)
Solution: Stop Subsidies
Subsidy amounts (USD billion)
60
50
40
30
Fuel
20
All except
fuel
10
0
FAO (1992)
This study
Milazzo (1998)
Khan et al. (2006)
Solution: Work With Consumers
and Retailers
• Fish Rulers
• Marine Stewardship Council
• More Research
Conclusions
• Fish stocks are declining worldwide
• Overfishing is drastically changing the marine
ecosystems
• Overfishing is driven by mismanagement, myths
and subsidies
• Top down solutions (MPAs, no subsidies, better
management (HCR)) are needed but slow
• Involving retailers and the public seems most
promising

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