Scientists Try to Count Fish in Sea 
By Elizabeth Williamson US Source: Washington Post 4/10/2006

Braced against a stiff wind, Paul Piavis, Butch Webb and Keith Whiteford hauled a net heavy with fish from the Choptank River into their motorboat and spilled them into a tub. Flapping among dull-colored catfish, yellow perch gleamed like tarnished gold.

The biologists, in camouflage gear and heavy boots, looked like any other anglers, but they were fishing for science. Back in their barracks-style office at the Maryland Department of Natural Resources, they would plug statistics about the fish they caught into mathematical models, taking a measure of the yellow perch population.
 

With nets and divers, sonar and surveys, scientists around the world grapple with one of Earth's great unknowables: how many fish in the sea.

Fish counts are the science behind regulations from Virginia's Northern Neck to the South Pacific, dictating a charter boat's take and an island nation's diet. But this is a science so inexact that some call it an art. And when the counting ends, the fighting often has just begun.

That's what happened this winter when Maryland tried to open the Choptank River to commercial yellow perch netters for the first time in nearly two decades. Counts had documented a 530 percent increase in the Eastern Shore river since 1988, Piavis said.

 
Choptank River Perch, Yellow Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
2676Underwater robot connects humans' sight and touch to deep seatechxplore2022-07-21US
2677Get paid for catching snakeheads: Maryland tagging program pays up to $200 per fishFOX 5 DC2022-07-06US
2678Fish-farming practices come under scrutiny amid surge in aquaculturemongabay2022-07-06ID
2679Thousands of dead fish washing up along shores of Chesapeake Bay after fishing company reports torn netwtkr2022-07-02US
2680Florida woman kills fish by pouring hot sauce in tank during a fight, deputies sayFOX 35 News2022-07-07US
2681Fisherman caught with fish bombing paraphernalia in Sempornathestar2022-07-08US
2682Engineers try to electro shock invasive carpabc17news2022-07-08US
2683Study: Half of Great Lakes residents unaware of safe fish consumption limitswoodtv2022-07-05US
2684В жару за карпомОхотники.ру2022-07-23RU
2685Meet Australia’s oldest freshwater fish, which can breathe air like a land dwellersmh2022-07-07AU
2686Texas angler becomes first female high school fishing national championwashingtonpost2022-07-06US
2687Ringleader, 35, of illegal poaching operation who stole £60,000 worth of salmon and trout over seven years avoids jailMailonline2022-07-09UK
2688Climate Change May Be Causing Skin Tumors On Antarctic Fishnewsweek2022-07-04US
2689Changes in Gulf of Maine may endanger lucrative fish stocks, experts sayupi2022-07-08US
2690Кто живет в тихой речкеОхотники.ру2022-07-21RU
2691Герасим и два Му-муОхотники.ру2022-07-22RU
2692Капитана из Новосибирской области будут судить на Камчатке за незаконный вылов 50 тыс. тонн рыбыРыболовство.2022-07-21RU
2693Reduced to a Trickle, River Managers Brace for More DryingAssociated Press2022-07-21US
2694Virginia man catches 66-pound blue catfish, breaks state recordFox News2022-07-20US
2695rare 400-pound spotted eagle ray jumps into boat, gives birthFox News2022-07-19US
2696Marine life activists sound off ahead of shark fishing tournamentwptv2022-07-08US
2697Go fish: Danish scientists work on fungi-based seafood substitutetheguardian2022-06-24UK
2698Man 'definitely hooked' on bowfishing after getting state record fish on Lake Taneycomonews-leader2022-06-25US
269988-year-old gives young angler the fly-fishing rod he made as a teenCBC News2022-06-25CA
2700Sea dragons’ genes give clues to their distinctive looksuoregon2022-06-27US

215 216 217 107 of [218 - pages.]