Aquaculture for all

Small Fish Harvesting Unsustainable

Sustainability Education & academia +2 more

TASMANIA - New research suggests that the current levels of harvesting of small fish at the bottom of the food chain are no longer sustainable.

The research on the fishing of small fish species near the bottom of their food chains suggests harvesting at levels previously thought to be sustainable could have devastating effects on some marine ecosystems.

The researchers strongly suggest harvesting levels should be drastically reduced to protect species further up the food chain that are themselves harvested for human food.

Research scientist Dr Tony Smith of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) in Hobart, Tasmania, along with Australian and international colleagues, studied species low on the food chains (known as low trophic level species) such as anchovies, sardines, capelin, mackerel, herring, and krill.

Using computer modelling, the researchers studied the effects of fishing on small fish species in five well-studied ecosystems off the coasts of Australia, southern Africa, California, the North Sea, and Peru.

They found that fishing of these species, sometimes even at levels previously thought to be sustainable, can have significant impacts on larger commercially harvested species, on other fish, marine mammals, and seabirds.

Low trophic level species tend to be the most abundant in the food web. They often eat plankton and are preyed on by larger fish, seabirds, and marine mammals such as dolphins and some whales.

Harvesting of these small fish species supplies around 30 per cent of the global fish catch, and in many developing countries they are a vitally important source of food. Much of the catch is also ground up to produce fish meal for use in fish farms and to provide food for livestock.

The impacts are not the same everywhere. For example, harvesting anchovies off the coast of south east Australia has little impact on the local ecosystem, but harvesting them off the Californian coast has a strong impact. The impacts were found to be greatest when these species form a “high proportion of the biomass in the ecosystem or are highly connected in the food web.”

The paper, published in Science this week, suggests catches should be drastically reduced and no-fishing zones might also be needed.

Dr Smith said fisheries could still achieve 80 per cent of what has up to now been considered the maximum sustainable yield (MSY) for these species if they halved the harvesting of these fish, and this would significantly reduce the impact on ecosystems and prevent their collapse, as well as helping stocks of larger fish species to recover from a decline caused by over-fishing.

The research is the first comprehensive study of the impacts of catching low trophic species on members higher up the food chains. The findings have implications on securing the human supplies of all fish species for food.

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