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Is Climate Change Killing Our Fish?
Arctic News ^ | March 15, 2004 | Joseph Quillan

Posted on 03/19/2004 4:42:58 PM PST by tgarr

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To: Ramius
"Overfishing is the key. The same thing is happening in Alaska. Modern fishing methods have simply become exceptionally efficient, and in even the best of the fishing grounds, nature is not keeping up with our ability to harvest."

EXACTLY. In FL the story was, 'why are there no big speckled trout' in the 10k islands? Answer, shrug never has been. OK most people accepted that. But then along came the net ban.

Now here it is years later and big trout are everywhere.

Fish simply don't' stand a chance against the onslaught of technology. Without limits on take and size there won't be any fish left anywhere. In CA they found that if the stocks of sardines get depleted too far, the fish populations cannot recover. Guess what, they depleted the stocks too far and now the sardine numbers are just a shadow of what used to be. We were doing the same thing with mullet in FL before the net ban. Both species BTW are significant food species for other fish. Bottom of the food chain.

We almost lost the redfish to the 'blacken redfish' craze a few years back. Took many years of stocking to revive the species. Strict controls on size and limits were necessarly. It looks promising.

Man must use common sense when dealing with wildlife. In the early 1900s market hunting was banned, soon I would expect to see all but subsistence and sport fishing banned. And then only with strict limits.

Technology will kill off all wildlife if we allow it.
41 posted on 03/20/2004 11:34:55 AM PST by snooker (Drag a 'botox gigolo' through a swamp, and some dumb gator will always bite.)
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To: Ramius
As someone who cooks and eats a lot of fish--it amazes me how affordable it has become just in the last few years. I can remember when salmon was a rare luxury, now we have it so often as to get tired of it. Just this after noon I baked a lovely fresh cod--

Just an aside. Whatever else is happening, prices are not going up.

42 posted on 03/20/2004 11:41:22 AM PST by Mamzelle
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To: tgarr
We should have never let factory ships take fishing away from the small-time fisherman.

Not unlike family farming...You'd be hard pressed to find a lot of family farms now-a-days...They are multi-million dollar "corporations" that own thousands upon thousands of acres...And then, these millionaires are subsidized by the gov't...Maybe the fish factories are subsidized as well...

43 posted on 03/20/2004 3:09:10 PM PST by Iscool
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