California rockfish near point of no return

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It's hard to see how a complex of species which are threatened because of a temperature-induced lack of plankton for the larval stages to feed on can also be sufferingf from overfishing, but according to this article, researchers Love and Yoklavich do just that.
 
Tuesday, January 12, 1999 

Rockfish populations off the southern and central California coast have severely declined in recent years, according to marine biologists from the University of California, Santa Barbara. 

A study headed by biologist Milton Love of the Marine Science Institute at UC Santa Barbara is using several techniques to examine the status of economically important bottom fishes offshore in California. The study is part of a cooperative research project being conducted with the U.S. Geological Survey Biological Resources Division. 

While the numbers of many rockfish species have declined precipitously, one in particular -- bocaccio -- might be listed as an endangered species if it were a land animal since the populations of bocaccio have dropped to 8-10 percent of their 1960 numbers, says Love. 

Rockfishes, which encompass approximately 70 species in California, have formed major fisheries -- both recreational and commercial -- in California waters since the 19th century, according to Love. 

"The direct observations we made from the Delta (two-person submarine) were particularly unsettling," said Love. "It is strange to travel over acres of excellent rockfish habitat, including rock outcrops with large crevices and caves, and see almost no large fishes." 

Love said that the decline of rockfish is a relatively long term phenomenon that has been occurring for decades, but has increased since the late 1970s. 

Love's findings are supported by similar studies (of the central Calfornia coast) being conducted by Mary Yoklavich of the National Marine Fisheries Service. "With the exception of small, isolated rock outcrops that likely serve as natural refuges for these fishes in deep water, we too have found very few large aggregations of these important fishes," said Yoklavich. 

Love and Yoklavich note that many of these areas contain swarms of small rockfishes, perhaps because the larger rockfishes that feed on the small fishes are gone. "For example, we surveyed over a mile of rocky reef at Lausen Knoll near Newport Beach in Southern California and found only three fishes larger than about 15 inches," said Love. "In the past, this was a major fishing ground for large rockfishes but now they are essentially gone." 

The researchers point to overfishing and poor survival of larval rockfish as the reasons for the decline. The rockfish larvae are not surviving because plankton, their food supply, has declined due to the warming of the ocean. "Basically the (rockfish) larvae are starving to death," said Love. "They never survive the larval stage." 

Love's research included more than 50 dives using the Delta. He surveyed extensive rock outcrops in waters between 100 and 1,200 feet deep and found that many of the areas, even those more than 100 miles from shore, harbored very few large rockfishes. 

Love also analyzed rockfish data compiled by coastal electrical power generating stations which corroborated his submarine research. The results have been published in volume 96 of the 1998 Fishery Bulletin, a publication of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration of the U.S. Department of Commerce. 

Both Love and Yoklavich are concerned that the numbers of some species of adult rockfishes may have reached levels so low that recovery of the populations may be quite difficult. They said this demonstrates the need to set aside areas where fishing is not allowed to help conserve and maintain these populations. 

Copyright 1999

 

 
 

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