PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

'Small fry' fish just as vulnerable to population plunges as sharks or tuna

'Small fry' fish just as vulnerable to population plunges as sharks or tuna
2011-05-03
(Press-News.org) On land, being small and lurking at the bottom of the food chain is a far better strategy for species survival than being big, fierce and perched on top, at least when humans are after you – just ask the mice and grizzly bears.

But talk to sharks and anchovies and they'll tell you a different story, according to a new study of fisheries collapses led by Stanford researchers.

Analyzing over 200 scientific assessments of fisheries around the globe, the team found that populations of small fish such as sardines and anchovies were at least as likely to have collapsed at some point in the last 50 years as stocks of large fish. A major cause of population crashes in all fisheries is overfishing.

That finding runs counter to the assumption of many scientists that the dramatic population declines suffered by large predatory fishes, including tuna, sharks and marlins, indicate they are at the greatest risk of extinction, just like large predators on land.

"We were expecting to see a strong pattern with large, top predators showing the highest probability of collapse," said Malin Pinsky, a graduate student in biology at Stanford and one of the researchers. "We were really surprised to find that just isn't the case."

Small species were up to twice as likely to have suffered a major decline, he said.

Pinsky is the lead author of a paper describing the research, to be published May 2 in the online Early Edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Small fishes are a vital link in the oceanic food chain and when a species suffers a plunge in population, it hits the mammals, birds and other fish that depend on that species for food.

"There are relatively few species at that level in the food chain, so if one of them collapses, it can have a big impact," Pinsky said. "It is a big deal."

Smaller fish tend to be short lived and therefore reproduce and mature faster than large species. As a result, a population drop in a smaller species tends to last about five years, Pinsky said, while larger species need about 15 years to recover.

But not every small fish population bounces back in a few years. The collapse of the sardine fishery in Monterey Bay is a prime example of that, Pinsky said, as it took decades for that stock to recover.

Over 25 percent of the world's fisheries consist of small fish, primarily for use in animal feed, fertilizer and nutritional supplements.

"The important lesson is that all species of fishes can collapse once humans decide to eat or use them, from sardines to swordfish," Pinsky said. "You hear the old adage, 'Don't sweat the small stuff,' but for fisheries, we do have to care about the little guys. This really contrasts with what scientists, managers and the conservation community have often assumed up until now."

Pinsky and Stephen Palumbi, director of Stanford's Hopkins Marine Station and a coauthor of the paper, collaborated on the study with colleagues at Rutgers University and Dalhousie University, in Halifax, Canada. They used two data sets, one compiled by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations and another housed at Dalhousie, to which researchers around the world contributed.

Together, the two sets are the most comprehensive collection of scientific fisheries data in the world. The data set at Dalhousie was assembled in 2009, Pinsky said, and this study was the first time researchers had been able to use both those data sets to explore the frequency with which various types of fisheries collapse worldwide.

When team members began examining the data, they were seeking to figure out a way to predict fisheries collapses, in hopes of then developing ways to head them off.

"We looked at everything from small species to really large species and asked how frequently fisheries collapses occur for the whole range," Pinsky said.

"We were not focused on small fishes when we started out, but that was what popped out."

The researchers' other finding was that there are no easy shortcuts to predicting which fisheries are likely to collapse. The only sure method is to monitor the state of a fishery and be alert to signs of overfishing, they said.

"Local managers and fishermen have known about individual fishery collapses for years," Palumbi said. "It took looking at 50 years of data and hundreds of fisheries to realize that these collapses among small species actually add up to a whole lot. Bringing a halt to overfishing is the best way to reduce collapses in the future."

Most of the available data came from fisheries in the developed world, so some of the findings of the study may not apply to the developing world because of differences in management practices, the researchers said.



INFORMATION:


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
'Small fry' fish just as vulnerable to population plunges as sharks or tuna

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Facing Future Education Costs for Children After a New Jersey Divorce

2011-05-03
Facing Future Education Costs for Children After a New Jersey Divorce Parents who are parting ways have a host of complex decisions to make, from alimony and division of property to child custody and child support. Every divorce is a unique legal matter with the potential for dispute at every turn, but through divorce mediation and a sense of cooperation, couples may be able to make the most of their marital assets to overcome future financial challenges. One important goal for many divorcing parents is to preserve their children's options for higher education. When ...

Austin, Texas, A Great Place To Start A New Business

2011-05-03
Austin, Texas, A Great Place To Start A New Business Austin is a great place to start a business. Austin is the U.S. market that is most conducive to the creation and development of small businesses, according to the latest On Numbers rankings. They used a six-part formula to analyze the nation's 100 largest metropolitan areas, searching for the places that offer the best climates for small businesses. The ranking is based on: -Population: The Austin area added 286,000 residents between 2004 and 2009, an increase of 20.2 percent. The only metro to grow faster ...

Global warming won't harm wind energy production, climate models predict

Global warming wont harm wind energy production, climate models predict
2011-05-03
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- The production of wind energy in the U.S. over the next 30-50 years will be largely unaffected by upward changes in global temperature, say a pair of Indiana University Bloomington scientists who analyzed output from several regional climate models to assess future wind patterns in America's lower 48 states. Their report -- the first analysis of long-term stability of wind over the U.S. -- appears in this week's Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Early Edition. "The greatest consistencies in wind density we found were over the Great ...

Reliant Technology Announces EMC CX Storage Upgrade Program

2011-05-03
EMC reseller Reliant Technology is pleased to announce the EMC CX Storage Upgrade program to help EMC storage customers upgrade their EMC CX, EMC CLARiiON CX3, and EMC CX4 systems. The upgrade program is designed to provide greater flexibility and investment stability to EMC CLARiiON customers. EMC recently released its new VNX Storage system, leaving many legacy customers curious about what options exist for EMC CLARiiON systems that are currently or soon to be End-of-Life. As the manufacturer phases out support for these systems, Reliant Technology's EMC CX Storage ...

Cells talk more in areas Alzheimer's hits first, boosting plaque component

Cells talk more in areas Alzheimers hits first, boosting plaque component
2011-05-03
Higher levels of cell chatter boost amyloid beta in the brain regions that Alzheimer's hits first, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis report. Amyloid beta is the main ingredient of the plaque lesions that are a hallmark of Alzheimer's. These brain regions belong to a network that is more active when the brain is at rest. The discovery that cells in these regions communicate with each other more often than cells in other parts of the brain may help explain why these areas are frequently among the first to develop plaques, according to ...

Study: Rare deep-sea starfish stuck in juvenile body plan

Study: Rare deep-sea starfish stuck in juvenile body plan
2011-05-03
A team of scientists has combined embryological observations, genetic sequencing, and supercomputing to determine that a group of small disk-shaped animals that were once thought to represent a new class of animals are actually starfish that have lost the large star-shaped, adult body from their life cycle. In a paper for the journal Systematic Biology (sysbio.oxfordjournals.org), Daniel Janies, Ph.D., a computational biologist in the department of Biomedical Informatics at The Ohio State University (OSU), leveraged computer systems at the Ohio Supercomputer Center (OSC) ...

Atlanta Countertops Manufacturer Craftmark Solid Surfaces Celebrates Its 20th Anniversary in 2011

2011-05-03
Atlanta countertops manufacturer Craftmark Solid Surfaces is celebrating its 20th anniversary in 2011. Craftmark is a premier countertops provider, supplying quality solid surface countertops, quartz countertops, and granite countertops with a wide selection of colors and styles. Craftmark Solid Surfaces was established in April of 1991, beginning as a small fabrication shop. At the time, Craftmark worked out of a 3,000 square foot building where the company fabricated solid surface kitchen countertops, including Corian, Swan stone, Gibraltar, and Craftmark's own trademarked ...

Mayo Clinic CPR efforts successful on man with no pulse for 96 minutes

2011-05-03
ROCHESTER, Minn. -- By all counts, the 54-year-old man who collapsed on a recent winter night in rural Minnesota would likely have died. He'd suffered a heart attack, and even though he was given continuous CPR and a series of shocks with a defibrillator, the man was without a pulse for 96 minutes. But this particular instance of cardiac arrest (http://www.mayoclinic.org/heart-attack/), reported first in Mayo Clinic Proceedings (http://www.mayoclinicproceedings.com) online, turned out to be highly unusual: "The patient made a complete recovery following prolonged pulselessness," ...

Animal studies reveal new route to treating heart disease

2011-05-03
Scientists at Johns Hopkins have shown in laboratory experiments in mice that blocking the action of a signaling protein deep inside the heart's muscle cells blunts the most serious ill effects of high blood pressure on the heart. These include heart muscle enlargement, scar tissue formation and loss of blood vessel growth. Specifically, the Johns Hopkins team found that their intervention halted transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) secretion at a precise location called cell receptor type 2 in cardiac muscle cells. Blocking its action in this cell type forestalled ...

Single atom stores quantum information

Single atom stores quantum information
2011-05-03
A data memory can hardly be any smaller: researchers working with Gerhard Rempe at the Max Planck Institute of Quantum Optics in Garching have stored quantum information in a single atom. The researchers wrote the quantum state of single photons, i.e. particles of light, into a rubidium atom and read it out again after a certain storage time. This technique can be used in principle to design powerful quantum computers and to network them with each other across large distances. Quantum computers will one day be able to cope with computational tasks in no time where current ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Global social media engagement trends revealed for election year of 2024

Zoom fatigue is linked to dissatisfaction with one’s facial appearance

Students around the world find ChatGPT useful, but also express concerns

Labor market immigrants moving to Germany are less likely to make their first choice of residence in regions where xenophobic attitudes, measured by right-wing party support and xenophobic violence, a

Lots of screentime in toddlers is linked with worse language skills, but educational content and screen use accompanied by adults might help, per study across 19 Latin American countries

The early roots of carnival? Research reveals evidence of seasonal celebrations in pre-colonial Brazil

Meteorite discovery challenges long-held theories on Earth’s missing elements

Clean air policies having unintended impact driving up wetland methane emissions by up to 34 million tonnes

Scientists simulate asteroid collision effects on climate and plants

The Wistar Institute scientists discover new weapon to fight treatment-resistant melanoma

Fool yourself: People unknowingly cheat on tasks to feel smarter, healthier

Rapid increase in early-onset type 2 diabetes in China highlights urgent public health challenges

Researchers discover the brain cells that tell you to stop eating

Salt substitution and recurrent stroke and death

Firearm type and number of people killed in publicly targeted fatal mass shooting events

Recent drug overdose mortality decline compared with pre–COVID-19 trend

University of Cincinnati experts present research at International Stroke Conference 2025

Physicists measure a key aspect of superconductivity in “magic-angle” graphene

Study in India shows kids use different math skills at work vs. school

Quantum algorithm distributed across multiple processors for the first time – paving the way to quantum supercomputers

Why antibiotics can fail even against non-resistant bacteria

Missing link in Indo-European languages' history found

Cancer vaccine shows promise for patients with stage III and IV kidney cancer

Only seven out of 100 people worldwide receive effective treatment for their mental health or substance-use disorders

Ancient engravings shed light on early human symbolic thought and complexity in the levantine middle palaeolithic

The sexes have different strengths for achieving their goals

College commuters: Link between students’ mental health, vehicle crashes

Using sugars from peas speeds up sour beer brewing

Stormwater pollution sucked up by specialized sponge

Value-added pancakes: WSU using science to improve nutrition of breakfast staple

[Press-News.org] 'Small fry' fish just as vulnerable to population plunges as sharks or tuna