Estimates of Marine Mammals Killed by Fishing Nets
thomasmd writes "Yahoo has an article describing the results of a new study by American and Scottish researchers that looked at the number of deaths by drowning of cetaceans (fishlike sea mammals) caught in fishing nets. Their alarming estimate was that more than 1000 cetaceans die every day from net entanglement."
I'm not a biologist, but I've always believed that humans are very hypocritical with environmental issues. Sure, diversity is good and all, but are we saving the whales because they're cute or because they're actually a useful part of the ecosystem?
It seems that everyone wories about cute little pandas and dolphins while exterminating valuable insects en masse just because they're ugly.
Without that kind of information, it's hard to tell just how serious this is. Sure 1000 sounds like alot, but what if 5000 are hit by boats ever day? Then that would be more important. I seriously doubt that that happens anywhere near that frequency, but you get the idea. Numbers don't mean much without perspective.
Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
I guess if the story was titled "Save the Whales", no one would take it seriously anymore.
At least they admit they pulled the statistics out of their ass:
To reach the worldwide estimates, the researchers resorted to multiplying the U.S. statistics.
I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
Do we have ANY FRIGGIN CLUE how many there are?
I think we have some good numbers on whales, in some species they all have names. But dolphins we don't really know, we know we're seeing much fewer than we used to but they may just be avoiding us. With some species we actually know there are much fewer, like "pink dolphins" or river dolphins, there you can actually just go out and count how many cross your path in a clear part of the river. I had a marine biologist roommate one summer and she would talk about so and so whale being missing this year.
The populations are probably falling more do to the lack of food than our actually catching the ocean mammals. We're pretty much killing our oceans with overfishing. Some countries, like Iceland have done well with resellable quotas (so you don't end up with a quota that lets you fish one day of the year with your super efficient new boat.) But that doesn't help migrating species that just get devistated somewhere else. We really need international agreement on fishing quotas, but that's not going to happen until more coutries try to manage their own fisheries. The New England cod economy completely collapsed yet the US hasn't even tried to save the still economic west coast fisheries. Totally irresponsible. Then there are the Japanese and Russians that go out and completely destroy whole swaths of ocean in international waters, destroying the market value of their catch with the rought treatment as well. They scrape up the ocean bottom so it takes decades for fish to return to the area in fishable numbers.
Sometimes one factory can devastate a whole country's ocean front. Peru has a single fish meal factory near Pisco that in the last decade has consumed so many anchovies that not only are they having problems getting anchovies, but all the regular fish are gone since there aren't enough anchovies for them to eat. They've now put some quotas on anchovy fishing, but it's not at a level that will let the population grow back. That would lose current jobs and most of the fishing jobs are already long gone... Here the problem is that if you target the bottom of the food chain for overexploitation you're just screewed.
We're really seeing this tragedy of the commons in the oceans because most countries haven't had the political incentive to put real quotas on there own fishermen when the fishermen rightly say the neighbors will just catch them instead, and no one seems to have any interest in a global solution. That is seen as an environmental thing and most governments have a knee jerk reaction against that. Economically it's just stupid to treat fish as a non-renewable resource to be consumed before your competitors do, they restore their populations pretty darn quickly if you just let them.
...In other news, 86,400 humans died today from hunger, a rate of one per second.
Who gives a shit about ceta-whats? There are more than enough human problems to dedicate time and energy to, why do people concern themselves with this?