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On Tue, 23 Jan 2007 08:27:06 -0800, Chuck Gould wrote:
Factionalized squabbling over a diminishing resource will result in both the recreational and commercial interests losing everything in the end. The same energy would be better spent enhancing the resource and making the total pie bigger for everybody. Cutting the amount of fish that can be caught is a last resort, the more proactive approach would be improving the quality of the environment so that fish can breed and survive in greater numbers. You might want to consider why the resource is diminishing, and it isn't because of recreational fishermen. The North Atlantic cod fishery is a good example. While it has never been high on the recreational fisherman's targets, and was once extremely abundant, it has now collapsed to the point that many scientists feel that it will be unable to recover. The blame for that lies strictly with the commercial interests, and their inability to police themselves. As to your proactive approach, for many fish stocks it is already too late for that. Commercial fishing technologies are so good that much of the fishery ends up as by-catch, or starving, after the bait fish has been turned into fertilizer. This debate is nothing new. It's been ongoing for 30 years as the fish stocks shrink. If there is a positive, it's that the recreational fishery has found it's voice and his exercising his economic power. |
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"thunder" wrote in message
... On Tue, 23 Jan 2007 08:27:06 -0800, Chuck Gould wrote: Factionalized squabbling over a diminishing resource will result in both the recreational and commercial interests losing everything in the end. The same energy would be better spent enhancing the resource and making the total pie bigger for everybody. Cutting the amount of fish that can be caught is a last resort, the more proactive approach would be improving the quality of the environment so that fish can breed and survive in greater numbers. You might want to consider why the resource is diminishing, and it isn't because of recreational fishermen. The North Atlantic cod fishery is a good example. While it has never been high on the recreational fisherman's targets, and was once extremely abundant, it has now collapsed to the point that many scientists feel that it will be unable to recover. The blame for that lies strictly with the commercial interests, and their inability to police themselves. As to your proactive approach, for many fish stocks it is already too late for that. Commercial fishing technologies are so good that much of the fishery ends up as by-catch, or starving, after the bait fish has been turned into fertilizer. This debate is nothing new. It's been ongoing for 30 years as the fish stocks shrink. If there is a positive, it's that the recreational fishery has found it's voice and his exercising his economic power. Slight detour: I know you read books. This might interest you: http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbnInquiry.asp?z=y&EAN=9780140275018&itm=1 Cod: A Biography of the Fish That Changed the World by Mark Kurlansky |
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