There is a great book about menhaden (now also an excellent film, shown recently on Maryland public TV) called "The Most Important Fish in the Sea: Menhaden and America" by H. Bruce Franklin. It clearly demonstrates how the over-fishing of this species is impacting the marine and estuarine ecology throughout its range, although the film focuses on Chesapeake Bay. There is also a short film about the book on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ajZWQ5eur98In the 1960s, when I first came to the Bay as a grad student, menhaden were far more abundant and the average fish much larger. A friend who worked as a young man on the Reedville VA menhaden boats talks about some individuals being 18" in length -- most are now half that. The species is being growth overfished (fish are not allowed to reach the size which would provide maximum yield) and possibly recruitment overfished as well (not enough fish reach reproductive size to sustain population). In Chespeake Bay there used to be two companies: Reedville Fish & Guano and Omega Protein, the latter is the last company fishing in the Bay. The importance of this species to other fish and fish-eating birds, as well as Bay water quality (menhaden filter algae from water) is immense. Yet the fishery councils continued to say the species is not overfished. But we know a lot more about menhaden's environmental role now than we did in the past There is a move to reduce take and also, to manage the species as part of an ecosystem, not in a vacuum. Time will tell if this is implemented and if it works...
Gail Mackiernan
Silver Spring, MD
From: "Paul Guris" <
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To: "Post Seabird-News" <
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Sent: Monday, May 14, 2012 5:37:42 PM
Subject: [Seabird-News:1643] Overfishing of Menhaden on America's Atlantic Coast