"Protein
miners"
threatening
northern
fish
stocks
require
concerted
regional
response

April 7 2009
Illegal,
unreported
and
unregulated
(IUU)
fishing,
which is
devastating
delicate
ecosystems
and fish
breeding
grounds in
waters to
Australia’s
north, can
no longer
be managed
effectively
by
individual
nations
and now
requires
an urgent
regional
solution
if food
security
into the
future is
to be
maintained,
according
to a new
scientific
report.
AIMS
fish
ecologist
Dr Mark
Meekan,
with
Charles
Darwin
University
ecologist
Dr Iain
Field, Dr
Corey
Bradshaw
from the
University
of
Adelaide
and the
South
Australian
Research &
Development
Institute,
and
Northern
Territory
fisheries
scientist,
Dr Rik
Buckworth,
have
published
a paper in
the
journal
Fish and
Fisheries*
that
advocates
a
multi-lateral
response
to a
problem
that has
grown out
of control
in recent
decades.
Worldwide
the value
of IUU
fishing is
estimated
between
$US9 and
$US23
billion
each year.
The
paper is
the first
big-picture
account of
the
problem
from
Australia’s
perspective.
Although
there had
been a
decline in
IUU
fishing in
Australian
waters
over the
past two
years,
possibly
linked to
large
Australian
government
expenditure
on
enforcement
and rising
fuel
prices,
the forces
driving
illegal
fishing
have not
gone away
and are
likely to
resurface
in our
waters.
Dr
Meekan
expects
that the
small-scale
illegal
fishers
will be
back to
prey on
other
species
such as
snapper,
trochus
and
trepang as
soon as it
is
economically
viable for
them to do
so. To
date,
these IUU
fishers
have
focused
mostly on
high-value
sharks
mainly for
the fin
trade, to
the extent
that the
abundance
of some
shark
species
has
dropped
precipitously.
He said
that IUU
fishing,
which has
devastated
fish
resources
and their
associated
ecosystems
throughout
Southeast
Asian
waters,
was driven
by deep
economic
and
societal
forces.
For
example,
the Asian
economic
crisis in
the late
1990s
drove a
large
number of
people out
of cities
and into
illegal
fishing.
It was
not enough
to
maintain
just a
national
response
as the
problem
crossed
national
maritime
zones, he
said, and
posed one
of the
biggest
threats
known to
marine
ecosystems
throughout
the
region.
"These
IUU
fishers
are mining
protein,"
Dr Meekan
said.
"There is
no regard
to
sustainability
or
factoring
in fish
breeding
or
ecosystem
protection."
"Illegal
fishing in
Australian
waters
started
increasing
steeply
about 10
years ago,
largely
because of
over-exploitation
of waters
further
north,
peaking in
2005-06
then
falling
away just
as
steeply,"
Dr
Bradshaw
said.
Dr
Field said
there were
three
factors
behind the
recent
downturn:
Australian
government
enforcement
measures
estimated
to have
cost at
least $240
million
since
2006; the
high price
of fuel
for the
fishing
boats;
and, most
importantly,
the fact
that the
high-value
species
may have
been
fished
out.
The
$240
million
has funded
surveillance,
apprehension,
transportation,
processing
and
accommodation
of the
several
thousand
illegal
foreign
fishermen
detained
each year
since
2006.
"These
activities
have been
successful,
but we
doubt that
they can
hold back
the IUU
tide
indefinitely,
since the
benefits
to the
illegal
fishers of
their
activities
far
outweigh
the
penalties
if
caught,"
Dr Field
said.
"With
increasing
human
populations
in the
region,
the
pressure
to fish
illegally
is likely
to
increase,"
according
to the
authors of
the paper.
"Regional
responses
are
required
to deter
and
monitor
the
illegal
over-exploitation
of
fisheries
resources,
which is
critical
to secure
ecosystem
stability
as climate
change and
other
destructive
human
activities
threaten
food
security."
*The
Fish
and
Fisheries
paper,
written by
Iain
Field,
Mark
Meekan,
Rik
Buckworth
and Corey
Bradshaw,
is titled
"Protein
mining the
world’s
oceans:
Australasia
as an
example of
illegal
expansion-and-displacement
fishing".
Go to
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-2979.2009.00325.x
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