Perilous
Times
Overfishing leaves swaths of Mediterranean barren
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Mar 09, 2012
Centuries of overexploitation of fish and other marine resources -
as well as invasion of fish from the Red Sea - have turned some
formerly healthy ecosystems of the Mediterranean Sea into barren
places, an unprecedented study of the Mediterranean concludes.
Research by an international team of scientists designed to
measure the impact of marine reserves found that the healthiest
places were in well-enforced marine reserves; fish biomass there
had recovered from overfishing to levels five to 10 times greater
than that of fished areas.
However, marine "protected" areas where some types of fishing are
allowed did not do better than sites that were completely
unprotected. This suggests that full recovery of Mediterranean
marine life requires fully protected reserves, the scientists
write in a paper published Feb. 29, 2012, in the journal PLoS ONE.
"We found a huge gradient, an enormous contrast. In reserves off
Spain and Italy, we found the largest fish biomass in the
Mediterranean," said National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence
Enric Sala, the paper's lead author. "Unfortunately, around Turkey
and Greece, the waters were bare."
The authors made hundreds of dives over three years off Morocco,
Spain, Italy, Greece and Turkey, setting up transects to count
fish and take samples of plants and animals living on the seafloor
in 14 marine protected areas and 18 open-access sites. The result
is information on the Mediterranean at an unprecedented scale.
While the level of protection was the most important factor in
determining the biomass of fish, the health of the algal forests
that support the fish depended on other factors, the authors
write. Recovery of formerly abundant algal forests takes longer
than recovery of fish. "It's like protecting a piece of land where
the birds come back faster than the old trees," Sala said.
The study also provides the first baseline that allows evaluation
of the health of any Mediterranean site at the ecosystem level -
not only its fish but the entire ecological community. The
trajectory of degradation and recovery found by the authors allows
for evaluation of the efficacy of conservation at the ecosystem
level for the first time.
Sala believes the results about fully protected marine reserves
give reason for hope in waters well beyond the Mediterranean. "If
marine reserves have worked so well in the Mediterranean, they can
work anywhere," he said.
Often called the "cradle of civilization," the Mediterranean is
home to nearly 130 million people living on its shores, and its
resources support countless millions more. A variety of pressures
keep the organisms that live in the sea in a permanent state of
stress.
"It's death by a thousand cuts," said Enric Ballesteros of Spain's
National Research Council and coauthor of the study. Among them
are overexploitation, destruction of habitat, contamination, a
rise in sea surface temperatures due to climate change and more
than 600 invasive species. On the southwest coast of Turkey, for
example, an invasive fish from the Red Sea called the dusky
spinefoot has left Gokova Bay's rock reefs empty.
A series of marine reserves that shelter slivers of the sea allows
certain ecosystems to recover and their all-important predators to
eventually reappear. "The protection of the marine ecosystems is a
necessity as well as a 'business' in which everyone wins," Sala
said.
"The reserves act as savings accounts, with capital that is not
yet spent and an interest yield we can live off. In Spain's Medes
Islands Marine Reserve, for example, a reserve of barely one
square kilometer can generate jobs and a tourism revenue of 10
million euros, a sum 20 times larger than earnings from fishing."
"Without marine reserves, fishing has no future," said fisherman
Miquel Sacanell, who fishes near the Medes reserve.