Title: RESOURCES FROM EARTH
1RESOURCES FROMEARTHS WATERS
- OCEANS, BAYS, LAKES,RIVERS PONDS, STREAMS ETC.
2WORLD POPULATION
3How Much of Our Food Supply Comes from Earths
Water
- 1 of food comes from the sea
- Earths Waters Supply 10 of the protein consumed
by humans
4Kinds of Food From Earths Waters
- Finfish make up 85 of world catch followed by
shellfish (mollusk and crustaceans) - Finfish come from - 86 ocean, 14
freshwater - Shellfish- 15 mostly from the ocean
5Kinds of Food From Earths Water contd
- Freshwater fisheris comprise 18 of the global
catch, and it is growing! - Seafood accounts for 15 of the total animal
protein consumed worldwide!! - (a very large number considering only1 of food
comes from the sea/rivers/lakes.
6Types of Fish and Shellfish
- Benthic and Demersal live at or near the
bottom of the sea in COLD Waters (ex. Flounder,
lobsters, crabs, whiting) - Clupeoid live in schools near surface on
continental shelf ex. Herrings (sardines),
Menhaden, Shads - Pelagic Open water fish (ex. Squid, Tuna,
Swordfish)
7Benthic Fish KING CRAB
- Live at or near the
- bottom of the sea
8COLD WATER DEMERSAL FISH
- Live near or around the bottom of the continental
shelf - Examples
- Cod, Pollack, haddock, hakes, whiting
- Caught in trawls
9COD
10WHITING
11POLLACK
12Benthic Fish
- Flounder
- Flat fish
- Eyes on one side
- Camouflage to
- match color of
- the sand
13Benthic Fishing Techniques
- Caught with trawls-dragged along the bottom of
the sea. TRAWLING
14FISHING TECHNIQUES
15Cod Fishery-Threatened!!
- 1992-Grand Banks placed moratorium (ended) the
cod fishery to save them from extinction. - 1994-Georges Bank fishery off New England closed
their operations also. - Experts predict the cod will NEVER recover!!!
16CLUPEOID FISH
- SARDINES travel in schools near the surface
along continental shelf
17CONTINENTAL SHELF
18CLUPEOID FISH
- Sardines, shad, herring, menhaden etc.
- Live in schools
- Found over continental shelf
- Caught using purse seines
- Eaten fresh, canned or pickled
- Ground into fish flour or Fish Protein Concentrate
19Fishing TechniquesPurse Seine Nets
20FISHING TECHNIQUES
21CLUPEOID FISH
- Used to produce fish oil
- Used to make fish meal for poultry feed
- Used to make fertilizer
- Industrial catches may result in overfishing
because they naturally fluctuate in population
and fisherman are unaware of their low cycles - 1940s sardine fishery collapsed
22Purse Seine Catches
23CLUPEOID FISH
24CLUPEOID FISH
25Sardines and Anchovies
26PELAGIC FISH
- Open Water Fish
- Billfish (Striped marlin, Blue marlin, Black
marlin Sailfish, Swordfish) - Tuna (Yellowfin, Skipjack, Bonito)
- Jacks (Yellowtail, Amberjack)
- Dolphinfish (Dorado)
- Mako shark
27Tuna
28TUNA
- Skipjack, yellow fin, big eye, albacore, blue
fin - Eaten raw in sashami
- Caught in gill nets, large sienes and long lines
- Blue fin can sell for up to 350.00 a pound
- Tuna population is down 10
- Fish nations would not declare it an endangered
species, but in 1995 agreed to restrict catches
to 50 of current catches -
29Fishing Techniques-Pelagic Fish
- Pelagic Fish are caught using large seines,
surface longlines and gill nets.
30COMMERCIAL FISHINGIN THE PAST
31FISHING TECHNIQUES
32FISHING TECHNIQUES
33LONG LINES-Pelagic Fish
34FISH NET
35GILL NET-Benthic/Demersal Fish
36Marlin
37SKIPJACK TUNA
38Blue Fin Tuna
39YELLOW FIN TUNA
40YELLOWFIN TUNA
41ALBACORE TUNA
42SWORDFISH
43MAKO SHARK
44FINNING
- Many sharks
- Are caught and
- Killed ONLY
- For their fins!!
- Then thrown
- Back into the
- Water to drown/die at sea.
- Fins sold to China for Shark Fin Soup ?
45HW-Textbook pages 355-377Questions on Resources
from the Sea Chapter.
46Total Marine Catches from 1990 to 1995
Total Marine Catches (million tons) 1990 (million tons) 1995
Fishes 69.36 73.07
Mollusks 7.73 10.61
Crustaceans 4.50 5.65
TOTALS 97.97 112.91
47MOLLUSK
- Second to finfish, mollusks are the most valuable
food source - Mollusks-Soft-body protected by a calcium
carbonate shell. - Largest catches include clams, scallops mussels,
oysters, abalone, squid, and octopus
48MOLLUSKS
49Fishing for Mollusks
- Shellfish-clams, oysters, scallops are caught
using a scallop dredge or traps sitting on the
seafloor.
50SCALLOP DREDGE
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52Pink Spiny Lobster
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57LOBSTERS, CRABS AND SHRIMP
58CRUSTACEANS
- Crabs
- Lobster
- Shrimp
- Caught in traps and trawls that are dragged along
the seafloor.
59LOBSTER TRAP
60LOBSTER IN TRAP
- Lobster and Crab Fishing Today
61SEAWEED
- Varieties of freshwater and marine algae are
popular as a food source in the far east - Often used in sushi, sashimi, and soup
62SEAWEEDS
- Seaweed is used in many cultures. It can be
consumed raw, cooked, dried. Contains substantial
amounts of protein
63SEA URCHIN (UNI)
- Roe (eggs and organs that make the eggs) demands
an incredibly high price in Japan
64Caviar
- Caviar is an expensive delicacy consisting of the
unfertilized eggs (roe) of sturgeon brined with a
salt solution .
65STURGEON
66SEA CUCUMBERS
- Called TREPANG OR BECHE-DE-MER are dried, smoked,
or eaten raw in orient
67JELLIES
- Jellies are dried and eaten in China
68POLYCHEATE WORMS
69Lab-Medicines from the Sea p.176
70SEA TURTLES
- Sea Turtles and their eggs are eaten wherever
found
71SEALS AND WHALES
- Still eaten, particularly in Arctic, West Indies,
and South Pacific
72MINKE WHALES
73BELUGA WHALES
74NEW YORK STATESENDANGERED FISH SPECIES
- Shortnose Sturgeon
- Silver Chub
- Pugnose Shiner
- Round Whitefish
- Bluebreast Darter
- Gilt Darter
- Spoonhead Sculpin
- Deepwater Sculpin
75How Much Fishing is Too Much?
- Optimal Catch vs. Over-fishing
- Renewable Resources are composed of living
organisms that can reproduce and replace
individuals lost to disease and predators
including humans. - Nonrenewable resources would not be replaced
naturally and would include oil and minerals.
76Over-Fishing
- Catch them faster than they reproduce.
- A population of fishes are over-fished and the
stock ( size of population) is reduced to a level
which can still reproduce successfully, fisheries
will cease to exist for a short time, then
rebound.
77Successful Reproduction
- Depends on a Proper Stocking
- Too many organisms lead to overcrowding,
excessive competition, and depletion of food
resources. - Too few organisms produce too few young to
maintain a proper self-sustaining stock. - Fish do best when there are not too many and not
too few. OPTIMAL
78MAXIMUM SUSTAINABLE YIELD
- The amount of fish that can be caught and just
balance the growth of the population. - Catch just enough fish to prevent population
growth, but not enough to reduce the population.
79Maximum Sustainable Yield Graph
80PROBLEMS WITH MAINTAINING MAXIMUM SUSTAINABLE
YIELD
- Fisheries strive to exceed maximal sustainable
yield or optimal catch. - Overfishing has already affected almost all
commercial fisheries. - Stocks of cod, haddock, herring, halibut, shark,
and wild salmon are in danger. - Fish stocks are damaged by pollution from oil
spills, sewage, and toxic chemicals.
81Problems Determining Maximum Sustainable Yield
- Not easy to determine
- Variation caused by catching fish when they are
too young or catching them before or after
breeding season may make all the difference. - No exact science about regulating stocks of fish
82Problems from the PastSardines
- 1940-Pacific Sardine fishery collapsed due to
heavy fishing that coincided with a low point in
their reproductive cycle.
83Problems of TodayBluefin Tuna
- Tunas-Northern bluefin tuna one of the largest
bony fish is very valuable. Their popluation is
down to less than 10 of their former numbers in
the Western Atlantic. - Nations are slow to respond, refusing to list it
as endangered. - 1995-Agreed to reduce catch limits by 1/2
84Problems of TodaySwordfish
- Swordfish-Close to commercial extinction.
- Stocks fallen 70 since 1960.
- 88 of swordfish caught in 1995 were too young to
reproduce!!!
85Other Threats
- Pollution
- Oil spills
- Sewage overflow
- Toxic Chemicals
- Fertilizer/pesticide runoff into oceans/lakes
- Habitat loss
- Destruction of breeding grounds
86Possible Remedies
- Set fishing limits below what we think is the
optimal catch - Limit the length of fishing season
- Restricting the size or number of boats
- Regulating the size and the sex of fish caught
- Certain methods of fishing can be eliminated (ex.
Trawls) or size of nets
87MORE REMEDIES
- Control the areas of the sea to be fished
- Safe fish farming
88Fishing and Life
- Many people are effected by the success or
failure of fisheries - Cannery
- Dock workers
- Boating and fishing gear industries
- Bankers
- Fisherman
- Local businesses
89Regulations
- 1989 United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea established a 200 nautical mile ( 1 nm 1.15
miles) exclusive economic zone. (EEZ) - Within this zone each country controls fishing,
oil, and mineral resources.
90New Fisheries
- Create a market to use junk fish or Bycatch
such as Alaskan Pollack, Monkfish, Croakers, and
Sea Robins will be consumed. They are presently
used to make fish flour, fish sticks and enrich
processed food.
91Industrial Fisheries
- Catch is used for purposes other than human
consumption (fish oil, margarine, paint, pet
food, fertilizer) - Industrial fisheries account for over 1/3 worlds
total fish. - Most clupeoid fish are used for FPC or fish flour.
92AquacultureFish Farming
- Can reduce pressure on the oceans for protein
- It is the commercial breeding and raising of fish
for human consumption. - Chinese have farmed freshwater fish for thousands
of years - Romans have raised oysters
- Videos\Aquaculture safer method.asf
93Fish Farm
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96Catfish Farming
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101Fish Farming Benefits
- Provide a plentiful inexpensive source of food
specifically protein for a large population - Easier and can be less expensive than catching
wild fish - May help prevent extinction of some species
102Limitations and Problems with Fish Farming
- Only a small number of fish species can be farm
raised - Clupeoid fishes need open ocean spaces and would
not survive on a farm - Parasites and diseases are a concern
- Cannibalism
- Need expensive filters and pools free of pollution
103Limitations and Problems of Fish Farming
- Use of artificial feed sources (ex. Chicken feed
or Junk Fish) - Concentration of Carcinogens (ex. PCP ) in some
populations. - Effect on local environment
104Salmon Farming
- Hatch in freshwater habitats from 0-18months
- At 18months they are moved offshore into pens in
the ocean. Stimulates normal lifecycle.
105Salmon Farming-Problems
- Waste concentrates and builds up in surrounding
water. - Disease spread quickly and easily to other fish
and fish that are not in the pen. - Chemicals given to salmon (antibiotics) may
affect humans. - Farmed salmon have higher levels of PCB, toxic to
humans!
106Salmon Farming Problems
- Sea lice-parasites on fish
107Video Clips
- Videos\Fish_Farms.asf
- Videos\Fish_Farming_.asf