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Scorched-Earth Fishing
Reprinted from ISSUES IN SCIENCE AND TECHNOLDGY. Volume XIV, Number 3 0 1998
by CARL SAFINA
The economic and social
consequences of overfishing, along
with the indiscriminate killing of
other marine animals and the loss
of coastal habitats, have stimulated
media coverage of problems in the
oceans. Attention to marine habitat
destruction tends to focus on
wetland loss, agricultural runoff,
darns, and other onshore activities
that are visible and easily
photographed. In tropical regions,
fishing with coral reef-destroying
dynamite or cyanide has been in the
news, the latter making it to the
front page of the New York Times.
Yet a little-known but
pervasive kind of fishing ravages
far more marine habitats than any
of these more noticeable activities.
Bottom trawls -- large bag-shaped
nets towed over the sea floor-- account for more of the world's catch of
fish, shrimp, squid, and other marine
animals than any other fishing
method. But trawling also disturbs
the sea floor more than any other
human activity, with increasingly
devastating consequences.
Carl Safina is director of the National
Audubon Society's Living Oceans Program
in Islip, New York, and the author of Song
for the Blue Ocean: Encounters Along the
World's Coasts and Beneath the Seas
(Henry Holt and Company, 1997).
SPRING 1998
The use of new fish-trawling gear
is doing incalculable damage to the seabed, destroying essential
habitat for marine
life.
Trawl nets can be pulled either
through mid-water (for catching
fish such as herring) or along the
bottom with a weighted net (for
cod, flounder, or shrimp). In the
latter method, a pair of heavy
planers called "doors" or a rigid
steel beam keeps the mouth of the
net stretched open as the boat tows
it along, and a weighted line or
chain across the bottom of the net's
mouth keeps it on the seabed.
Often this "tickler" chain frightens
fish or shrimp into rising off the sea
bottom; they then fall back into the
moving net. Scallopers employ a
modified trawl called a dredge,
which is a chain bag that
plows through the bottom, straining
sediment through the mesh while
retaining scallops and some other
animals.
Until just a few years ago,
trawlers were unable to work on
rough bottom habitats or those
strewn with rubble or boulders
without risking hanging up and
losing their nets and gear. For
animal and plant communities that
live on the sea bottom, these areas
were thus de facto sanctuaries.
Nowadays, every kind of
seabedsilt, sand, clay, gravel,
cobble, boulder, rock reef, worm
reef, mussel bed, seagrass flat,
sponge bottom, or coral reef-is
vulnerable to trawling. For fishing
rough terrain or areas with coral
heads, trawlers have since the mid1980s employed "rockhopper" nets
equipped with heavy wheels that
roll over obstructions. In addition to
the biological problems rockhoppers
create, this fishing gear also
displaces commercial hookand-line
and trap fishers who formerly
worked such sites without
degrading the habitat. Wherever
they fish and whatever they are
catching, bottom trawls churn the
upper few inches of the seabed,
gouging the bottom and dislodging
rocks, shells, and other structures
and the creatures that live there.
Ravaging the seabed
Much of the world's seabed is
encrusted and honeycombed with
structures built by living things.
Trawls crush, kill, expose to
enemies, and remove these sources
of nourishment and hiding places,
making life difficult and dangerous
for young fish and lowering the
quality of the habitat and its ability
to produce abundant fish
populations.
Bottom trawling is akin to
harvesting corn with bulldozers that
scoop up topsoil and cornstalks
along with the ears. Trawling
commonly affects the top two
inches of sediment, which are the
habitat of most of the animals that
provide shelter and food for the
fish, shrimp, and other animals that
humans eat. At one Gulf of Maine
site that was surveyed before
trawling and again after rockhopper
gear was used, researchers noted
profound changes. Trawling had
eliminated much of the mud surface
of the site, along with extensive
colonies of sponges and other
surface-growing organisms. Rocks
and boulders had been moved and
overturned.
It may be hard to get excited
about vanished sponges and
overturned rocks. But for the
fishing industry-like that in New
England, which has lost thousands
of jobs and hundreds of millions of
dollars in recent years and is
suffering the resultant social
consequences-habitat changes
caused by fishing gear are
significant. The simplification of
habitat caused by trawling makes
the young fish of commercially
important species more vulnerable
to natural predation. In lab studies
of the effects of bottom type on fish
predation, the presence of cobbles,
as opposed to open sand or gravel-
pebble bottoms, extended the time it
took for a predatory fish to capture
a young cod and allowed more
juvenile cod to escape predation.
But virtually the entire Gulf of
Maine is raked by nets annu- and
New England's celebrated Georges
Bank, the oncepremier and now-
exhausted fishing ground, is swept
three to four times per year. Parts
of the North Sea are hit seven
times, and along Australia's
Queensland coast, shrimp trawlers
plow along the bottom up to eight
times annually. A single pass kills 5
to 20 percent of the seafloor
animals, so a year's shrimping can
wholly deplete the bottom
communities.
More data needed
Considering how commonplace
trawling has become in the world's
seas, researchers have completed
astonishingly few studies. For
example, virtually nothing is known
about shrimp trawling's effects on
the Gulf of Mexico's seabed,
although this is one of the world's
most heavily trawled areas. The
effects on fish populations and the
fishing industry, although probably
significant, have been difficult to
quantify because there are few
unaltered reference sites. But the
studies available suggest that the
large increases in bottom fishing
from the 1960s through the early
1990s are likely to have reduced
the productivity of seafloor habitats
substantially, exacerbating
depletion from overfishing.
Peter Auster and his
colleagues at the University of
Connecticut's National Undersea
Research Center have found that
recent levels of fishing effort on
the continental shelves by trawl
and dredge gear "may have had
profound impacts on the early life
history in general, and survivorship
in particular, of a variety of
species." At three New England
sites, which scientists have studied
either within and adjacent to areas
closed to bottom trawls or before
and after initial impact, trawls
significantly reduced cover for
juvenile fishes and the bottom
community. In northwestern
Australia, the proportion of
highvalue snappers, emperors, and
groupers-species that congregate
around sponge and soft-coral
communities--dropped from about
60 percent of the catch before
trawling to 15 percent thereafter,
whereas less valuable fish
associated with sand bottoms
became more abundant.
In temperate areas, biological
structures are much more subtle
than the spectacular coral reefs of
the tropics. A variety of animals,
including the young of
commercially important fish,
mollusks, and crustaceans, rely on
cover afforded by shells piled in the
troughs of shallow sand ridges
caused by storm wave action,
depressions created by crabs and
lobsters, and the havens provided
by worm burrows, amphipod tubes,
anemones, sea cucumbers, and
small mosslike organisms such as
bryozoans and sponges.
Some of these associations are
specific: postlarval silver hake
gather in the cover of amphipod
tubes; young redfish associate with
cerrianid tubes and small squid and
Soup shelter in depressions made
by skates; newly settled juvenile
cod defend territories around a shelter.
Studies off Nova Scotia
indicate that the survival of juvecod is higher in more complex
habitats, which offer more shelter
from predators. In another study,
the density of small shrimp was 13
per square meter outside trawl drag
paths and zero in a scallop dredge
path.
A general misperception is that
small invertebrate marine bottom
dwellers are highly fecund and
reproduce by means of drifting
larvae that can recolonize large
areas quickly. In truth, key
creatures of the bottom community
can disperse over only short
distances, Offspring must find
suitable habitat in the immediate
vicinity of their parents or perish.
The seafloor structures that juvenile
fish rely on are often small in scale
and are easily dispersed or
eliminated.by bottom trawls. Not
only is the cover obliterated, but the
organisms that create it are often
killed or scattered by the trawls.
Les Watling of the University
of Maine (who has studied the
effect of mobile fishing gear in situ)
and Marine Conservation Biology
Institute director Elliott Norse have
shown that trawling is analogous to
strip mining or clear-cut- that
trawling affects territories that are
larger by orders of magnitude. An
area equal to that of all the world's
continental shelves is hit by trawls
every 24 months, a rate of habitat
alteration variously calculated at
between 15 and 150 times that of
global deforestation through
clearcutting.
Trawling is
analagous to strip
mining or clear
cutting-except that
trawling affects
areas that are
larger by orders of
magnitude.
Human source of physical
disturbance on the world's
continental shelves. Indeed, so few
of the shelves are unscarred by
trawling that studies comparing
trawled and untrawled areas are
often difficult to design. The lack
of research contributes to the lack
of awareness, and this could be
one reason why trawling is
permitted even in U.S. national
marine sanctuaries.
Trawling is not uniformly bad
for all species or all bottom
habitats. In fact, just as a few
species do better in clear-cuts,
some marine species do better in
trawled than in undisturbed
habitats. A flatfish called the dab,
for instance, benefits because
trawling eliminates its predators
and competitors and the trawls'
wakes provide lots of food.
But most species are not
helped by trawling, and marine
communities can be seriously
damaged, sometimes for many
decades. Communities that live in
shallow sandy habitats subject to
storms or natural traumas such as
ice scouring tend to be resilient and
resist physical disturbances. But
deeper communities that seldom
experience natural disturbances are
more vulnerable and less equipped
to recover quickly from trawling. In
Watling and Norse's global review
of studies covering various habitats
and depths, none showed general
increases in species after bottom
trawling, one showed that some
species increased while others
decreased, and four indicated little
significant change. But 18 showed
serious negative effects, and many
of these were done in relatively
shallow areas, which generally tend
to be more resilient than deeper
areas.
Comparing the damage caused
by bottom trawling to the clear-
cutting of forests is not
unreasonable in light of the fact that
some bottom organisms providing
food or shelter may require
extended undisturbed periods to
recover. Sponges on New
England's sea floor can be 50 years
old. Watling has said that if trawling
stopped today, some areas could
recover substantially within months,
but certain bottom communities
may need as much as a century.
Reducing the Damage
Humanity's focus on extracting
food from the oceans has
effectively blinded fishery
managers to the nourishment and
shelter that these fish themselves
require. If attention were paid
instead to conservation of the living
diversity on the seabed, fisheries
would benefit automatically
because the ecosystem's
productivity potential and inherent
output and service capacity would
remain high.
Actions that would
simultaneously safeguard the
fishing industry as well as the seabed need to be
taken now. These measures would
include:
1) No-take replenishment
zones where fishing is prohibited.
This would help create healthy
habitats supplying adjacent areas
with catchable fish. Such
designations are increasingly
common around the world,
particularly in certain areas of the
tropics, and benefits often appear
within a few years. b New
England, fish populations am still
very low, but they are increasing in
areas that the regional fishery
management councils and National
Marine Fisheries Service have
temporarily closed to fishing after
the collapse of cod and other
important fish populations. The
agencies should make some of
these closings permanent
to permit the areas' replenishment
and allow research on their
recovery rates.
2) Fixed-gear-only zones,
where trawls and other mobile gear
are banned in favor of stationary
fishing gear, such as traps or hooks
and lines, that doesn't destroy habitat.
New Zealand and Australia
have closed areas to bottom
trawls. So have some U.S. states,
although
these closures are usually attempts
to protect fish in especially vulnerable areas or to reduce
conflicts
between trawls and other fishers,
not to protect habitat. Temporary
closures in federal waters, such as
those in New England, should in
some cases be made permanent for
trawls but opened to relatively benign stationary gear. What gear is
permitted should depend on bottom type, with mobile gear allowed
more on shallow sandy bottoms
that are relatively resistant to
disturbance but barred from
harder, higher-relief, and deeper
bottoms where trawler damage is
much more serious.
3) Incentives for development
of fishing gear that does not
degrade the very habitat on which
the fishing communities ultimately
depend. Fish and fisheries have
been hurt by perverse subsidies
that have encouraged overfishing,
overcapacity of fishing boats, and
degradation of habitat and marine
ecosystems. Intelligently designed
financial incentives for encouraging
new and more benign technology
could tap the inherent inventiveness
of fishers in constructive ways.
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