Science Current Events | Science News | Brightsurf.com
 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print Overfishing great sharks wiped out North Carolina bay scallop fishery

Overfishing great sharks wiped out North Carolina bay scallop fishery

March 30, 2007

CHAPEL HILL — Fewer big sharks in the oceans led to the destruction of North Carolina's bay scallop fishery and inhibits the recovery of depressed scallop, oyster and clam populations along the U.S. Atlantic Coast, according to an article in the March 30 issue of the journal Science.

A team of Canadian and American ecologists, led by world-renowned fisheries biologist Ransom Myers of Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, has found that overfishing in the Atlantic of the largest predatory sharks, such as the bull, great white, dusky and hammerhead sharks, has led to an explosion of their ray, skate and small shark prey species.




"With fewer sharks around, the species they prey upon - like cownose rays - have increased in numbers, and in turn, hordes of cownose rays dining on bay scallops have wiped the scallops out," said co-author Julia Baum of Dalhousie.

"This ecological event is having a large impact on local communities that depend so much on healthy fisheries," said Charles Peterson, a professor of marine sciences biology and ecology at the Institute of Marine Sciences at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and co-leader of the study.

In 2003, Myers and Baum published a study in Science that showed rapid declines in the great sharks of the northwest Atlantic since the mid-1980s. In the new study, funded by the Pew Institute for Ocean Science, the research team examined a dozen different research surveys from 1970-2005 along the eastern U.S. coast and found that their original study underestimated the declines: scalloped hammerhead and tiger sharks may have declined by more than 97 percent; bull, dusky and smooth hammerhead sharks by more than 99 percent.

"The extent of the declines shouldn't be a surprise considering how heavily large sharks have been fished in recent decades to meet the growing worldwide demand for shark fins and meat," Baum said.

Sharks are targeted in numerous fisheries, and they also are snagged as bycatch in fisheries targeting tunas and swordfish in both U.S. and high-seas fisheries. As many as 73 million sharks are killed worldwide each year for the finning trade, and the number is escalating rapidly.

With an average population increase of about 8 percent per year, the East Coast cownose ray population may now number as many as 40 million. The rays, which can grow to be more than 4 feet across, eat large quantities of bivalves, including bay scallops, oysters, soft-shell and hard clams in the bays and estuaries they frequent during summer and migrate through during fall and spring.

In the early 1980s Peterson sampled bay scallops in North Carolina sounds in late summer before and after the cownose rays passed through and found that most scallops survived the ray predation, allowing the scallop population to support a fishery and still replenish itself each year. In contrast, sampling in recent years by Peterson and co-author Sean Powers of the University of South Alabama and the Dauphin Island Sea Lab - after the cownose ray population explosion - showed that the migrating rays consumed nearly all adult bay scallops in the area, except those protected inside fences that the researchers had put up to keep the rays out. By 2004, cownose rays had completely devastated the scallop population, terminating North Carolina's century-old bay scallop fishery.

"Increased predation by cownose rays also may inhibit recovery of oysters and clams from the effects of overexploitation, disease, habitat destruction and pollution, which already have depressed these species," said Peterson, noting shellfish declines in areas occupied by cownose rays and examples of stable or growing shellfish populations in areas beyond the ray's northernmost limit.

Ecologists have long predicted that the demise of top predators could trigger destructive consequences. Researching such effects, however, has been a challenge.

"This is the first published field experiment to demonstrate that the loss of sharks is cascading through ocean ecosystems and inflicting collateral damage on food fisheries such as scallops," said Ellen Pikitch, executive director of the Pew Institute for Ocean Science and a professor at the University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science. "These unforeseen and devastating impacts underscore the need to take a more holistic ecosystem-based approach to fisheries management."

"Maintaining the populations of top predators is critical for sustaining healthy oceanic ecosystems," said Peterson. "Despite the vastness of the oceans, its organisms are interconnected, meaning that changes at one level have implications several steps removed. Through our work, the ocean is not so unfathomable, and we know better now why sharks matter."

Solutions to the problem, Baum said, "include enhancing protection of great sharks by substantially reducing fishing pressure on all of the shark species and enforcing bans on shark finning both in national waters and on the high seas."

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill



Related Scallop Current Events and Scallop News Articles Scallop Current Events and Scallop News RSS Scallop Current Events and Scallop News RSS
Remotely Operated Vehicles and Satellite Tags Aid Turtle Studies
Researchers are using a remotely operated vehicle (ROV) and satellite-linked data loggers to learn more about turtle behavior in commercial fishing areas and to develop new ways to avoid catching turtles in fishing gear.

Ocean acidification may contribute to global shellfish decline
Relatively minor increases in ocean acidity brought about by high levels of carbon dioxide have significant detrimental effects on the growth, development, and survival of hard clams, bay scallops, and Eastern oysters, according to researchers at Stony Brook University's School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences.

Loss of top predators causing surge in smaller predators, ecosystem collapse
The catastrophic decline around the world of "apex" predators such as wolves, cougars, lions or sharks has led to a huge increase in smaller "mesopredators" that are causing major economic and ecological disruptions, a new study concludes.

Annual Survey Shows High Numbers of Seed Scallops on Georges Bank, Low Numbers in Mid-Atlantic
A NOAA Fisheries scallop survey off the northeastern coast between North Carolina and Massachusetts shows high numbers of juvenile "recruit" sea scallops and ocean quahogs on Georges Bank tempered with weak numbers for seed scallops in the Mid-Atlantic for 2009.

Ancient protein offers clues to killer condition
More than 600 million years of evolution has taken two unlikely distant cousins - turkeys and scallops - down very different physical paths from a common ancestor. But University of Leeds researchers have found that a motor protein, myosin 2, remains structurally identical in both creatures.

MIT aims for kinder, gentler scallop dredge
The director of MIT Sea Grant's Center for Fisheries Engineering Research wants to build a better dredge-even though he's the first to admit that current dredges do a fine job of catching the creatures.

Was Bristol Channel hit by a tsunami?
On the occasion of the 400th anniversary of Britain's largest natural disaster, the author of 2001's prophetic book Tsunami: The Underrated Hazard (Cambridge University Press) reveals strong new evidence that the Bristol Channel was devastated by a tsunami on January 30, 1607.

Overfishing large sharks impacts entire marine ecosystem, shrinks shellfish supply
Fewer big sharks in the oceans mean that bay scallops and other shellfish may be harder to find at the market, according to an article in the March 30 issue of the journal Science, tying two unlikely links in the food web to the same fate.

Harmful Algal Bloom (Red Tide) Models and Forecasts to be Expanded in Gulf of Maine
A new observation and modeling program focused on the southern Gulf of Maine and adjacent New England shelf waters could aid policymakers in deciding whether or not to re-open, develop, and manage offshore shellfish beds with potential sustained harvesting value of more than $50 million per year.

Seagrass Is In Decline Worldwide, Says UNH Researcher
Around the world, seagrass beds - shallow-water ecosystems that are important habitats, food sources, and sediment stabilizers - are in decline.
More Scallop Current Events and Scallop News Articles
Omaha Steaks 6 (4.5 oz.) Stuffed Sole with Scallops & Crab Meat

Omaha Steaks 6 (4.5 oz.) Stuffed Sole with Scallops & Crab Meat
by Omaha Steaks

Year after year, these hand-prepared delights are a customer favorite! Premium white sole fillets with a savory bread crumb stuffing...packed with chopped scallops and crabmeat. They taste as delicious as they sound!

Ek Success PSPNPCS001 3-Inch X-Large Paper Shapers Scallop Circle Nesting Punch

Ek Success PSPNPCS001 3-Inch X-Large Paper Shapers Scallop Circle Nesting Punch
by EK Success

There is nothing subtle about larger-than-life punches. Whether they're centered on a card or garnishing the corners of a scrapbook page, these bold, beautiful X-Large Punches send a message that's hard to miss. Punch size is 2.75-inch.

  Polar Smoked Scallops in Oil, 3-Ounce Units (Pack of 24)
by Polar



The Ramsay Scallop

The Ramsay Scallop
by Frances Temple (Author)

The year is 1299. Fourteen year-old Elenor reluctanly awaits the return of her betrothed -- a man she hardly knows -- from the Crusade. Thomas, broken and disillusioned from years of fighting, finds the very idea of marriage and lordship overwhelming. So When the village priest sends them on religious pilgrimage before the marriage, both are relieved. The journey means a postponement of the dreaded nuptials, and a last chance for adventure. As Eleanor and thomas wend their way toward the shrine of St. James, they meet mant other pilgrims -- each with their own extraordinary tales to tell and ideas to share. There is Etienne, a passionate student of philosophy; Brother Ambrose, gentle teacher of Sschoolboys; practical Marthe, eager for a decent life for her children. And graually Eleanor...

Scallop Lace Satin Low Rise Thong, White S

Scallop Lace Satin Low Rise Thong, White S
by 007Lingerie

Elegant and sensual satin low rise thong with stretchable scallop floral lace back. Cotton lined crotch. Made with stretchable Spandex/Elastand fiber. Available in 3 sizes: S, M, and L.

Uchida LV-GCP65 Clever Lever Giga Craft Punch, Scallop Circle

Uchida LV-GCP65 Clever Lever Giga Craft Punch, Scallop Circle
by Uchida

Make your own party favors, greeting cards, confetti, announcements etc with these fun punches.

8" CHROME-PLATED CRAFTER'S SCALLOP SHEARS

8" CHROME-PLATED CRAFTER'S SCALLOP SHEARS
by Hawk


Great for hobbyists and dressmakers, these shears have a unique "scallop" pattern - perfect for special effects! Overall 8" with 3 1/2" legs from the pivot down. Cast and polished, black plastic traditional handle.
-SKU (MODEL#): SC-51804. -Manufacturer: Hawk. -Material: Stainless Steel (blade), ABS (handle).. -Usage: Professional and Home Use.. -Package Dimension: 9.5" X 8.5" X 1".


  Ek Success PSPNPCS002 2-Inch X-Large Paper Shapers Scallop Circle Nesting Punch
by EK Success

Nesting punches are perfect for creating graduated shapes on scrapbook pages, cards and more. Jump-start your creativity when making journal and photo mats using either the positive or negative punched out pieces.

Zippo BLU Gold Tuxedo 18-Karat Gold Plate with Diamond Carved Scallops & Herringbone Bands

Zippo BLU Gold Tuxedo 18-Karat Gold Plate with Diamond Carved Scallops & Herringbone Bands
by Zippo

Zippo, maker of the world famous windproof pocket lighter, proudly introduces the Zippo BLU butane lighter, next step in the evolution of the perfect flame. The refillable, butane fueled Zippo BLU pocket lighter promises the same rugged reliability, classic styling, flint-wheel ignition, and famous lifetime guarantee you've come to expect from a Zippo windproof lighter. Diamond carved scallops accented with alternating herringbone bands adorn this 18-karat Vertical Gold Plate lighter. The stylish design is engraved on both the front and reverse sides. This genuine Zippo BLU butane lighter is packaged in a distinctive cardboard gift box with the famous Zippo lifetime guarantee.

Plush Scallop Puppet 6"

Plush Scallop Puppet 6"
by Folkmanis Puppets

6" wide hand puppet This shy fellow may clam up upon occasion, but you can coax him out of his shell. Just put your thumb in his lower half, middle finger in his top half, and ring and index finger in his eye stalks. It's an open and shut case!

© 2009 BrightSurf.com