Harvesting the Sea - Commercial fishing and its effects on Osteichthyean and Chondrichthyean fishes.
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Transcript of Harvesting the Sea - Commercial fishing and its effects on Osteichthyean and Chondrichthyean fishes.
Harvesting the Sea - Commercial fishing and its effects on Osteichthyean andChondrichthyean fishes
Between 1950 and 1994, ocean fishermen increased their catch 400% by doubling the number of boats and using more effective fishing gear. In 1989, the world's catch leveled off at just over 82 million metric tons of fish per year. “That's all the ocean can produce. Sending more boats won't help us catch more fish”.
Wait a minute, catch has increased dramatically but fish/person has not!Why???
Human Population growth 1950 2.5 billion2000 6 billion
Fisheries collapse - The North Atlantic Cod Collapse
Recent, widespread collapse of fisheries
1950’s
Multiple ecological effects of overfishing
“Bycatch”Worldwide, fisheries throw away 25% of their catchFor each pound of shrimp caught in a trawl net, an average of two to ten pounds of other marine life is caught and discarded
Recent research: Nature 2006
Pacific coast of US: exploited fish species populations more variable from year to year than non-exploited
Ecology Letters 2006:
Overharvesting, especially of older fish, may rapidly lead to “Darwinian Debt” loss of genes coding for important characteristics like size, age at reproduction, egg size and number
Chilean seabass live at least 40 years, orange roughy at least 100. A Pacific rockfish caught in 2001 was 205 years old—born when Washington was still president! Such slow-growing fishes are very vulnerable to overfishing
Be Part of the Solution
By making better seafood choices using the Seafood Watch card (e.g. Monterey Bay Aquarium website www.mbayaq.org) you know which fish are caught with little bycatch. That way you can support responsible fishermen and help reduce wasted catch.
Major evolutionary events in Vertebrate History
1) Evolution of jaws and paired appendages
2) The Evolution of Tetrapods and Invasion of Terrestrial Environments
Devonian Age of Fishes- Ostracoderms, placoderms, acanthodians, chondrichthyes, actinopterygians, sarcopterygians, first tetrapods!!
Devonian conditions
Warm shallow seas
Land with primitive plants
Land with terrestrial invertebrates
Why important?
Lots of aquaticDevonian predators and competitors
So what?
Hypotheses about evolutionary forces driving invasion of the land
Eusthenopteron
Ichthyostega
Acanthostega
Evolution of Tetrapods – example of transitional forms