In the most comprehensive review of fisheriesâ management and fishing management on a per region basis, to date, an international team of researchers concluded that fish stocks are mostly increasing in world waters.
In their paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the research team gathered data from 50% of the worldâs fish stocks, which include harvest rate, recovery rate, fishing pressure, and population numbers, as well as 50% of the worldâs fisheriesâincluding management strategies, fluctuations, and predictions in maximum sustainable yield.
The conclusion provided in their paper is strikingâgood news that may be surprising to most. Where commercial fishing is managed, stocks are growing.
âThis article compiles estimates of the status of fish stocks from all available scientific assessments, comprising roughly half of the worldâs fish catch,â the authors begin, âand shows that, on average, fish stocks are increasing where they are assessed.â
âWhere fisheries are intensively managed, the stocks are above target levels or rebuilding.â
While the last major dataset accumulated for fish stocks only included North America, South Africa, New Zealand, Australia and Europe, the researchers added the Black Sea, the Mediterranean, Northwest Africa, South America, Russia, and Japan.
Fish stocks declined on average globally until 1996, when the trend began to halt. In 2005 it started going the other way, and in 2016 the biomass of animals was higher than the maximum sustainable yield marker and fishing pressure was lower than the unsustainable maximum yield markerâaveraged across all measured fish stocks worldwide.
The teamâs study modeling also gives nations looking to increase the biomass of their fish stocks a very simple and concrete solutionâkeep the fishing pressure below the unsustainable maximum yield marker, and fish stocks will recover. Their paper details that 19% of fish stocks that are still depleted are poised to recover based on fishery management along this basic principle.
âScientifically managed and assessed fish stocks in many places are increasing, or are already at or above the levels that will provide a sustainable long-term catch,â concludes the paper.
Source : GNN