DPG is a comprehensive underwater photography website and community for underwater photographers. Learn underwater photography techniques for popular digital cameras and specialized professional underwater equipment (wide angle, macro, super macro, lighting and work flow). Read latest news, explore travel destinations for underwater photography. Galleries of professional and amateur underwater photography including wrecks, coral reefs, undersea creatures, fashion and surfing photography.
Flickr
Twitter
Facebook
Also connect with us on......
RSS Feeds
DPG Widgets

"Back From the Brink"- New York Times Editorial On Fisheries

By Matt J. Weiss, August 9, 2009 @ 03:50 PM (EST)
Source: Nytimes.com

When last this page quoted Boris Worm, a marine ecologist in Canada, in 2006, he was conjuring a frightening vision of a world without seafood. Overfishing, pollution and other depredations, he said, could obliterate almost all the ocean’s commercial fish species by 2048.

Last week, Dr. Worm, of Dalhousie University in Halifax, wrote in the journal Science that depleted fisheries can be saved if they are wisely managed, and that progress has already been made in five of 10 large fisheries where careful conservation measures are in place.

But what may be most encouraging about the new paper is how it came to be. It is a collaboration between Dr. Worm and a fisheries scientist who had been one of his sharpest critics in 2006 — Ray Hilborn of the University of Washington. Dr. Hilborn had accused Dr. Worm back then of cherry-picking facts and extrapolating wildly to reach baseless conclusions.

It was not a promising way to start a professional dialogue, but rather than hunker down in opposing camps, the two men met on a rich field of data. They agreed on new methods for assessing how many fish of a given species were being taken, compared with the total population. They compiled surveys and databases and other tools that both could agree on.

Comments
Be the first to add a comment to this article.
You must be logged in to comment.
Related Content
Sponsors










What's New
Our Partners
Xray
DigiDeep
ScubaDiver
Underwater Australia
PADI
DEMA
Underwater Journal
Wetpixel-Partner
Plongeur.com
DiveNewsWire
ScubaPortal.net
UWP Mag
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise
Proud Member of the Underwater Network