Question:
Are we running out of fish?
2006-11-08 07:24:50 UTC
Would you be willing to stop eating endangered fish?
26 answers:
lantaliban
2006-11-08 07:27:54 UTC
tell that to the JAPS lol
Gilly S
2006-11-08 18:41:48 UTC
Yes. Simple as that - a survey earlier this year tried to find the common skate and foudn zero. Cod is endangered. As are many other species. Someone claimed that we would not run out because of fish farms - small problems the fish on the farms are fed with pellets made up of wild fish - hmmm anyone else spot the probelm with that one?

The reason is an over zealous and over greedy approach to fishing backed by technological developments in the last century that continue to damage the environment - from trawlers to drag nets - which scoop and scrape everythign from the ocean floor and now are ound to destroy the delicate eco system on the ocean floor- deep sea fishing is now threatening marine stocks and varieties that haven't even been properly explored yet - industrialised factory ships - largely from Japan - scoop all and everything while smaller famers collecting prawns from the supermarkets use cyanide to destroy reefs for short term gains same as with mango forests being grubbed up for prawn farms that last a couple of years and then the area becoems unworkable and the mango swamps that protected the land from flooding is also threatened. What we need - stop eating fish. Demand action and see some political will to stop fishing, enforce the laws and create vast exclusion zones. Oh and good to see Spillers makers of Whiskers now think adding Cod to the range of cat food is a good idea - to$$ers!
redrancherogirl
2006-11-08 15:38:03 UTC
Yes, I think we are indeed. I fish avidly every summer here in Indiana (never keep anything to eat though... river water's too polluted.) But I do know that as a child, sunfish were really common, I'd say as common as bluegill or carp... and now I'm in my twenties and the last time I remember seeing one was once last summer. I just found out they are on the Indiana protected species list. There are also several other kinds of fish that once called the Wabash river home but are now very rare, like the bigmouth buffalo, spoonbill catfish, and others. I stopped keeping and eating native fish a long time ago. I think everyone needs to do the same or we won't have any more twenty years from now, between overfishing and pollution.
2006-11-08 15:40:48 UTC
Think about your question.

Every fish is capable of producing a million or more offspring and each of those offspring are capable of producing another million. In just two generations that's a Trillion (US) fish. By catching just one fish, over a trillion fish are lost and I'm not going to even think about how many fish it comes to when you look at the third, fourth and subsequent generations.



That is just the over-fishing aspect



Environmental change means that in many cases the seawater temperatures have changed so that fish are less fertile, more prone to diseases (bacteria, etc thrive in warmer water), etc.



The big problem is that fishing with nets is pretty much indiscriminate so for every fish that comes out of the sea and is wanted for onward sale, five or more times as many are discarded - too small, wrong type, poor demand, etc.



So what is the answer to your question? No I'm not condemning your question or your asking it - it is very good for discussion.
janus
2006-11-08 15:52:18 UTC
Yes some Countries catch more Fish than others and so are

over exploiting the Seas. In Europe the E U Parliament is Bringing

in more Harsh Methods to lessen the amount of Fish Caught in

Order to conserve Stocks. In Ireland the Government has banned

Drift Net Fishing for Salmon under Directives from E U in order to

conserve Stocks. The Drift Net Fishermen is being offered

compensation for loss of Livlihood ,But they say it is not enough.

There is a war of Words at moment over it.The anglers are delighted as are the B+Bs who cater to the angling Industry

there is a lot of money to be made from the Anglers,especially

when its not Summer anymore and the normal Summer Tourists have gone Home.And then there is the Massive Pollution of our Seas by Heavy Metals, Mercury,Cadmium,Pcbs,and last but not least AtomicPolluting

in Irelands Case Windscale in Cumbria U K Poisoning our

Celtic Sea and fish Therin.
plutoniccatgirl
2006-11-08 15:37:11 UTC
I couldn't but Haddock the other day.. I don't think that it was an endangered fish. ! I had to buy Cod.. Didn't they say that it was the Cod stocks were low. ???? I'm confused.. but since I don't eat endangered fish.. ( haddock might be come that exception ) . I would be willing for TRUE information on the subject. Whats the chance of me getting that.. with Chips.. !! salt and vinegar please too.
NANCY K
2006-11-08 16:03:01 UTC
Not just yet. It's just that they glow in the dark from all the crud we have dumped in the ocean.



I remember when I was young that a person worked where they used lots of mercury. They took their excess/used mercury and dumped it in Long Island Sound!!



He was concerned, but there was nothing he could do to stop them. Back then, nobody knew all the stuff they know now.



We probably didn't have any government agency to know what it meant to do stuff like that, let alone care.



Now when I hear about "mercury in fish" I always remember the huge amounts they dumped. If that was now, they would all be imprisoned, fined, and closed down.
chara
2006-11-08 15:34:10 UTC
yes, many fisheries are no more, and pollution and fishermen have depleted the resources.



i just learned about this yesterday in sociology 102 (Sociol problems) Population growth is now over 7 billion world wide. People will eventually fight over resources and prices will go sky high, even worse than now.



As population increases pollution will also continue to sky rocket, and people will get sicker. Fish are not the only endangered species.



but as fisheries and farmlands are taken over by machinery and technology, industrialization, and pollution, the worlds forest will be continuelly cut down, and many things will be in danger.
nashpaty
2006-11-08 15:37:28 UTC
Fish are the animals that will not run out because of fish farms or hatcheries where they grow fish. The only water species which are in endanger are dolphins, seals and whales, and ever one knows that no one eats these three things.
robert x
2006-11-08 15:36:59 UTC
Yes we are! - there are too many fishing trawlers seeking to few fish..Greed and over fishing is resulting in fish stock collapse! - Sooner or later there will be so few fish in the sea it will have drastic effects on the wild life ecology of the earth.. Remember fish are a very important part of the food chain, for many species, including mankind..Since greed always seems to win over conservation then Its not easy to see how its going to be possible to stop or reduce present consumption, and fishing practises.. There are huge amounts of money involved and thousands of jobs.. The fishing industry lives for today and conveniently forgets about tomorrow..
SteveT
2006-11-08 15:27:17 UTC
Yes. Fish stocks are endangered. It makes sense to stop eating them, but it may be too late already
2006-11-08 15:43:31 UTC
Because of all the guide line's put out by the fishery's commission, you can't bring this ashore or that ashore it has to be this size or that size, that is why there is a shortage of fish, they still get court up in the nets but they have to be thrown back in the sea again, they are already dead, so why the hell not bring them ashore, not eating fish is not the answer.
kimht
2006-11-08 16:11:56 UTC
the ocean is full of fish since the beginning of life

mostly properly the species that we caught will be extinct in the future but other species that beyond our reached with still be there as same as million years ago

is important for us to start practice fish farming in order to gets our ocean food supply and no dumping of chemical waste in ocean around the world
big pup in a small bath
2006-11-08 15:35:21 UTC
Only if I knew others were making the effort too - that may sound a bit non-green but I wouldn't like to think I was the only person making a sacrifice!
2006-11-08 15:27:22 UTC
yes, the nation is running out of fish and it's becoming a problem
Trapped in a Box
2006-11-08 15:27:45 UTC
i would be willing to stop eating fish since they might be in danger.
2006-11-08 16:48:05 UTC
We are getting too many people eating them. The balance is being upset.
KIPPAX
2006-11-08 15:38:44 UTC
no got a freezer full of it, n morrisons has even more!

it'll be that jon west is the best tuna chunks man gettin giddy wit his rod
Jack me myself
2006-11-08 15:27:36 UTC
I just had fish and chips for lunch. I had to wait for the chips though. it would appear that potatoes are more of a risk. Fish is always available.
cc
2006-11-08 15:33:20 UTC
yea I don't eat fish so I can give it up
?
2006-11-10 10:38:34 UTC
I think we are , My two Goldfish Emigrated last week
mickladd
2006-11-08 20:47:06 UTC
Not at all just take a sniff of your local bingo hall next time its open...
2006-11-08 15:30:38 UTC
No its all about getting popularity, the scientist wanted to get popular and so they revealed a fake information.
david
2006-11-08 15:26:32 UTC
No , I am not running out of fish. I have salmon and perch in the freezer.
ALAN B
2006-11-08 15:27:43 UTC
i am more scared of running out of chips to go with it
TMFULP.
2006-11-08 15:44:33 UTC
yh all greek peeps are eating them... any of u greeks dont violate me, im greek too... xxx lol


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