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April 22, 2002
UC Santa Cruz researchers featured in PBS documentary series on fishing crisis
By Linley Erin Hall
Cuddly animals such as pandas and sea otters usually steal the limelight in conservation
programs. But a new PBS documentary series spotlights fish as animals in desperate
need of protection.
| Since supermarket shelves are never empty, many people have a hard time believing
their dinner may be headed for the endangered species list. |
Two UCSC researchers are featured in the two-part series, which explores problems
associated with fishing and fish farming. Part one of the series, Empty Oceans,
Empty Nets, premieres on Earth Day, Monday, April 22, on PBS stations nationwide.
More than 100 million metric tons of seafood are harvested annually, but the supply
is shrinking while demand grows. Overfishing, destructive fishing practices such
as trawling, and the increasing human population all contribute to fish stock declines.
But, since supermarket shelves are never empty, many people have a hard time believing
their dinner may be headed for the endangered species list.
"People have no concept of how rich the oceans once were," said Steven
Berkeley, a research specialist at UCSC's Institute of Marine Sciences. "If
you never saw a fishery, habitat, or wildlife population before exploitation, you
don't know what was out there."
In Empty Oceans, Empty Nets, Berkeley discusses the North Atlantic swordfish
fishery. Fishers catch swordfish using longlines, which also catch marlin, sharks,
and sailfish. In addition, fishers toss back dead juvenile swordfish they cannot
sell because of minimum-size regulations. Berkeley works with the fishing industry
to develop fishing gear that will reduce the number of unwanted fish caught.
"A fisher's livelihood is tied up in fishing, but also in the ability of the
ocean to continue to produce fish," Berkeley said. "It's a complex issue,
so this isn't just a wildlife documentary."
Part two, Farming the Seas, looks at the benefits of and problems with aquaculture,
or fish farms. In it UCSC's Dennis Kelso, an assistant professor of environmental
studies and coholder of the Pepper-Giberson Chair, discusses the environmental aspects
of salmon aquaculture.
The documentary series, produced by Habitat Media, consists of two one-hour episodes.
Empty Oceans, Empty Nets will premiere at 9 p.m. on April 22 and repeat at
11 p.m. on April 26. Farming the Seas is still in production and will air
sometime in the fall.
Habitat Media is part of Habitat Productions, a project of the Tides Center, a nonprofit
organization in San Francisco. Habitat Media has produced several award-winning documentaries
about sea turtles, and plans to use footage from Empty Oceans, Empty Nets
to create a 15-minute film for aquariums and science museums to show. More information
about the series can be found on the Habitat Media web
site.
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