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Monterey Bay Aquarium "Seafood Watch" program

Have you heard about the Monterey Bay Aquarium "Seafood Watch" program? WOW - these guys are doing some great work to provide the public information about sustainable seafood choices. I just attended a very informative presentation sponsored by the world renowned Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, the Sonoran Sea Aquarium and the Monterey Bay Aquarium. The focus of the evening was to bring attention to the need for sustainable seafood choices and also entertain us with cooking demonstrations by chefs Janos Wilder, Albert Hall and Nick Ruman. The evening was delightful and the food (sustainable seafood of course) was superb.

The mission of the "Seafood Watch" program is to empower seafood consumers and businesses to make choices for healthy oceans. Using your purchasing power to drive the market toward environmentally responsible fishing and fish farming practices, you ultimately help assure abundant supplies of seafood for the future.

Seafood Watch makes seafood recommendations based on the environmental impact of fishing or fish farming operations. The Monterey Bay Aquarium has produced Seafood Watch pocket guides to categorize these seafood recommendations and to help you determine which seafood is from an eco-friendly source.

The regionally designed pocket guides are broken down into 3 categories:

Best Choices: These fish are abundant, well managed and caught or farmed in environmentally friendly ways.

Good Alternatives: These are good alternatives, but there are some concerns with the way they are caught or farmed. They are, however, better choices than items in the Avoid column.

Avoid: Avoid these products, at least for now. These fish come from sources that are overfished, depleted or are caught or farmed in ways that harm the environment.

Click here to download your own West Coast pocket guide, or Gulf of California pocket guide (PDF). You can see and download all the regional pocket guides at the Seafood Watch pocket guide page.

The following are excerpts from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Seafood Watch program website:

What is sustainable?
Well Managed - Abundant and Resilient - Minimal Bycatch - Minimal Habitat Impact

Sustainable seafood comes from fishing and farming operations having minimal impact on the surrounding environment. Seafood Watch evaluates the sustainability of a fishery or fish farming operation based on these factors:

  • Is the fishery or fish farm well managed?
  • Is the population being fished healthy and abundant?
  • Is there a problem with bycatch (the catching and discarding of unwanted marine life, dead or dying)?
  • Is there habitat damage either from fishing gear or pollution from a fish farming operation?

Overfishing
70% of the world's fisheries are at capacity, overfished or depleted.
Why are seafood supplies in trouble? What is causing populations of fish to decline? One of the largest concerns is overfishing, or taking fish out of the water before they reproduce to sustain healthy population sizes. The more efficiently we catch the fish, the more populations shrink, until the fish are depleted.

A May 13, 2003 article in the scientific journal Nature sums it up: Since the advent of industrialized fishing efforts, we have fished 90% of large fish, such as tuna, swordfish and cod. Scientists warn that we are now fishing the last 10% of these populations.

Can the oceans keep up?
While populations of fish and other marine life continue to decline, demand for seafood is increasing. A growing global population, increased awareness about health benefits of eating seafood, and modern technologies delivering seafood across the globe to doorsteps in a day are all contributing to concerns that oceans cannot keep up with demand. As we efficiently remove the fish, there simply won't be enough fish left to support a healthy, viable fishing industry.

Bycatch
Another issue affecting the health of the oceans is bycatch, when fishing gear unintentionally catches species such as seabirds, sea turtles and other marine life. They are ultimately thrown overboard, dead or dying, because they have no market value or are prohibited to sell. Approximately 25% of the world's catch is wasted; 44 billion pounds of marine life a year are bycatch.

Pelagic longlining targets fish by using baited hooks connected to a central line. The central line is three to 50 miles long and is allowed to "soak" in the ocean, attracting anything that swims by. This includes endangered sea turtles and many other species of marine life, such as this blue shark (above). Unfortunately, the damage to the shark had been done by the time the line was hauled aboard.

Habitat Damage
Marine life habitats are fragile and often damaged by fishing gear outfitted to drag along the seafloor. The right-hand image above shows the damage of a trawling net, outfitted to drag along the seafloor, targeting groundfish such as cod. Along the net's base are large rubber tires, called "rockhoppers," that allow the net to hop over any rocks, ledges or other structures along the seafloor without getting snagged. The effects on the seafloor are devastating. Vast expanses of ocean bottom have been stripped of their natural structures that fish and other marine life need for shelter, breeding, nursery grounds and feeding.

More information about each of the seafood recommendations is available at www.mbayaq.org/cr/seafoodwatch.asp. You can download a PDF Seafood Report for each species and link to additional information about that species in the "All Fish List." The web site offers fishing gear animations, information about bycatch, overfishing and links to other useful sites. By using and distributing the Seafood Watch materials, you are playing an important and vital role in marine conservation.

 
 
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