Fishing down the food web

Fishing down the food web

Fishing down the food web is the process whereby fisheries in a given ecosystem, "having depleted the large predatory fish on top of the food web, turn to increasingly smaller species, finally ending up with previously spurned small fish and invertebrates".[1]

The process was first demonstrated by the fisheries scientist Daniel Pauly and others in an article published in the journal Science in 1998.[2] Large predator fish with higher trophic levels have been depleted in wild fisheries. As a result, the fishing industry has been systematically "fishing down the food web", targeting fish species at progressively decreasing trophic levels.

The trophic level of a fish is the position it occupies on the food chain. The article establishes the importance of the mean trophic level of fisheries as a tool for measuring the health of ocean ecosystems. In 2000, the Convention on Biological Diversity selected the mean trophic level of fisheries catch, renamed the "Marine Trophic Index" (MTI), as one of eight indicators of ecosystem health. However, many of the world's most lucrative fisheries are crustacean and mollusk fisheries, which are at low trophic levels and thus result in lower MTI values.[3]

  1. ^ Pauly, Daniel; Watson, Reg (2009). "IV.10 Spatial Dynamics of Marine Fisheries" (PDF). The Princeton Guide to Ecology. pp. 501–510. doi:10.1515/9781400833023.501. ISBN 9781400833023. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 June 2012.
  2. ^ Pauly, Daniel; Christensen, Villy; Dalsgaard, Johanne; Froese, Rainer; Torres, Francisco (1998). "Fishing Down Marine Food Webs" (PDF). Science. 279 (5352): 860–863. Bibcode:1998Sci...279..860P. doi:10.1126/science.279.5352.860. PMID 9452385.
  3. ^ Sethi, Suresh A.; Branch, Trevor A.; Watson, Reg (2010). "Global fishery development patterns are driven by profit but not trophic level". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 107 (27): 12163–12167. Bibcode:2010PNAS..10712163S. doi:10.1073/pnas.1003236107. PMC 2901455. PMID 20566867.

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