Historical Photographs Expose Decline In Florida's 'Trophy' Fish; 'Large Fish More Abundant In The Past' 
US Source: Underwatertimes 2/17/2009
Historical Photographs Expose Decline In Florida's 'Trophy' Fish; 'Large Fish More Abundant In The Past'
A unique study by a scientist at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego has provided fresh evidence of fishing's impact on marine ecosystems. Scripps Oceanography graduate student researcher Loren McClenachan accessed archival photographs spanning more than five decades to analyze and calculate a drastic decline of so-called "trophy fish" caught around coral reefs surrounding Key West, Florida.

In a paper published online in January and printed in an upcoming issue of the journal Conservation Biology, McClenachan describes a stark 88 percent decline in the estimated weight of large predatory fish imaged in black-and-white 1950s sport fishing photos compared to the relatively diminutive catches photographed in modern pictures. In a companion paper being published in the Endangered Species Research journal, McClenachan employs similar methods to document the decline of the globally endangered goliath grouper fish.
 

"These results provide evidence of major changes over the last half century and a window into an earlier, less disturbed fish community…" McClenachan said in the Conservation Biology paper.

McClenachan's studies are part of an emerging field called historical marine ecology, in which scientists study photographs, archives, news accounts and other records to help understand changes in the ocean ecosystem over time and establish baselines for future ecosystem restoration.

McClenachan believes that historical ecology can not only help describe the structure of ecosystems that existed in the recent past, but can be used to establish goals for restoration of large predators, both on land and in the water.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4251‘A lost run’: logging and climate change decimate steelhead in B.C. riverthenarwhal2020-11-26CA
4252Kettle River closed to fishing until Aug. 25 to protect fishbclocalnews2020-06-30CA
4253Kettle River was first known as Nehoialpitkunelsonstar2015-06-07CA
4254Border jumper avoided arrest by floating down a B.C. river for hours: Mountiesctvnews2020-07-27CA
4255Learning from Indigenous leadership in Haida Gwaiinatureconservancy2020-04-20CA
4256Quarter of fish in Hauraki Gulf have microplastics in their guts, study findsstuff2012-03-18NZ
4257'Black fish' scam trawlermen admit illegally landing £6.6m worth of herring and mackereldailyrecord2012-06-14UK
4258Robotic fish’s painted smile helps it get friendly with tank-matesmetro2012-06-08UK
4259Invasive snakehead predator fish caught in pond in B.C. parkthestar2012-06-08CA
4260Agriculture minister refutes accusations about Animal Healthcomoxvalleyrecord2012-06-05US
4261Survey: Most Ohio Voters Worry About Invasive Fishfox82012-06-05CA
4262Leaping sturgeon injures woman in Suwanee Riverjacksonville2012-06-05US
4263Why ‘River Monsters’ still rules reality televisionhollywoodsoapbox2012-05-29US
4264Otsego angler facing jail time, possible $3,000 finehometownsource2012-05-29US
4265Pacific Bluefin Tuna Carrying Fukushima Radioactivity To California CoastUnderwatertimes2012-05-29US
4266Rare encounter between 2 wild, shrieking lynx caught on videoCBC News2018-05-21CA
4267Caught on cam: Dramatic river rescue at Little Qualicum Fallsctvnews2020-12-14CA
4268Rescue crews save man from raging Little Qualicum River waterspqbnews2020-12-13CA
4269Some Green Groups Oppose Lower Snake River Dam Removal PlanAssociated Press2021-03-27US
4270Minnesota, Wisconsin DNR Tackle Invasive Carp on MississippiAssociated Press2021-03-31US
4271Rhode Island Moves up Start of Trout Fishing SeasonAssociated Press2021-03-28US
4272North Carolina man found dead in river after jumping in to save sonFox News2021-03-24US
4273Canadian Coal Company Pays $60M for Environmental Damage Associated Press2021-03-29US
4274Behind the scenes at the Fish Hospital at Atlantis DubaiCNN2021-03-22SA
4275Biofluorescent fish documented in the Arctic for the first timeupi2021-03-18US

217 218 219 170 of [220 - pages.]