Long-lived Deep-sea Fishes Imperiled by Technology, Overfishing; 'We Shouldn't Eat Grandmother' 
US Source: Underwatertimes 2/18/2007

Many commercially prized fish from the depths of the world's oceans are severely threatened by over-fishing and the species' ability to recover is constrained by the fishes' long lifespans and low reproductive success, a panel of experts said today at the annual meeting of the American Association of the Advancement of Science. Some of the fish species living at depths greater than 500 meters take decades to reach breeding maturity, so there are no quick-fix remedies available to replenish the population, said Selina Heppell, a fisheries biologist from Oregon State University.

"The harvest of deep-sea fishes is a lot like the harvest of old-growth timber," Heppell said, "except we don't ‘replant' the fish. We have to depend on the fish to replenish themselves. And the habitat that used to provide them protection – the deep ocean – is now accessible to fishing because of new technologies."
 

Among the most recognized deep-sea species at-risk are orange roughy and Patagonian toothfish, better known as Chilean sea bass. In the deep ocean off the Pacific Northwest, sablefish – also known as black cod – are another depleted species. Deep-sea fishes grow slowly because of limited food sources and slower metabolisms and many don't reach sexual maturity for 30 to 40 years, Heppell said. The harvest of older fish may have an even greater impact on these threatened populations because older fish are more likely to breed successfully than younger fish.

"When you buy orange roughy at the store, you are probably purchasing a filet from a fish that is at least 50 years old," Heppell said. "Most people don't think of the implications of that. Perhaps we need a guideline that says we shouldn't eat fish that are as old as our grandmothers."

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
951Recent steps towards closing the life cycle of European eelthefishsite2024-02-05UK
952Farmers pledge more funding to help save Scotlands wild salmonthefishsite2024-02-03UK
953Florida high schooler reels in 250-pound goliath grouper from beachFox News2024-02-05US
954Nova Scotian investigations lead to CAD 260,000 in fines over halibut fishery violationsseafoodsource2024-02-08CA
955Virtual fishing tournament reels in walleyemississippivalleypublishing2024-02-06US
956Massive sea creature with over 3,000 teeth seen in rare Australia visitmiamiherald2024-02-08AU
957Sonar plus jigging spoon equals fishechopress2024-02-02US
958Minnesota DNR reworks management plans for over 100 lakesechopress2024-02-07US
959A new stem-tetrapod fish from the Middle–Late Devonian of central Australiatandfonline2024-01-13AU
960Whirling disease confirmed in B.C. for 1st time, sparking fears for fish populationsCBC News2024-01-19US
961Fish bombing: 2 foreigners nabbed near Pulau Tigadailyexpress2024-01-20MY
962Montanans fish for answers to mysterious decline in trout populationpbs2024-01-20US
963Ловля судака на флейтуohotniki2024-01-23RU
964A new study finds a critical vitamin for salmon in riversopb2024-01-21US
965Popular social media creator catches his first tarpon in Floridabradenton2024-01-16UK
966North Atlantic Fish Stocks Could Halve Due to Hidden Vulnerabilitynewsweek2024-01-17UK
967US Coast Guard approves demolition plan for Maine fishing boat that crashedFox News2024-01-17US
968Sustainable Dining and Commercial Fishing: The answer to invasive Asian carp?nationalfisherman2024-01-18US
969Fight against Blast Fishing Is Ramping Uphakaimagazine2024-01-19TZ
970France temporarily bans fishing to protect dolphinsBBC News2024-01-19FR
971Get Kids Outdoors hosts inaugural ice fishing event in memory of Crookston pilotechopress2024-01-26US
972WILL LANDLOCKED SOCKEYE BEHAVE AS SEA FISH IF GIVEN CHANCE IN OCEAN?FISHERIES NEWS BULLETIN1932-11-01CA
973The incredible story of reeling in a 109-pound halibutGlobal News2024-01-24CA
974Brexit-based red tape costs Scotland's salmon sector millionsthefishsite2024-01-24UK
975Как раньше ловили налимов в Подмосковьеohotniki2024-01-19RU

219 220 221 38 of [222 - pages.]