|
April
30, 2004
Populations Of Peruvian Seabirds
Plummeted
Due To Increased Fishing Activity, Study Says
By Mario Aguilera
In the late
19th and early 20th centuries, the tens of millions of marine
birds living in the "Bird Islands of Peru" became
famous around the world. This was due to their appeal as a visual
spectacle and because they became economically important as
high producers of guano, droppings that the country mined and
exported around the world for fertilizer.
A
new study published in the current issue of the journal Fisheries
Oceanography says the populations of these famous birds have
declined dramatically in the last 40 years, largely because
the availability of their main food supply, anchovies, once
plentiful, has been severely reduced by the Peruvian fishery.
The authors of the
study are Jaime Jahncke and George Hunt of the University of
California, Irvine, and David Checkley of Scripps Institution
of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego.
The results are the
product of a new scientific model developed by Jahncke while
studying with Checkley at Scripps Institution. The model characterizes
the Peruvian marine ecosystem by cross-referencing natural factors
such as wind strength with human influences through fishing
activity. "We saw a very different system prior to and
after fishing was increased," said Jahncke. "This
model gives us a very clear example of how physical processes
in the ocean and human influences can limit the populations
of these birds, changing them from one state to another."
The Peruvian anchovy
fishery, the largest single-species fishery in the world, significantly
increased production in the 1950s and '60s, exporting millions
of metric tons of anchovies per year.
The
study shows that wind forces in the early part of the 20th century
caused a significant rise in the nutrient supply off the Peruvian
coast and thereby led to a boom in the anchovy population. With
more food available, the numbers of guano-producing seabirds,
including cormorants, boobies and pelicans, similarly increased
from 1925 to 1955.
But in the decades
that followed, the seabird populations declined significantly.
"The decrease,"
the authors note, "appears to be due to the depletion of
their food by the fishery, which grew to catch about 85 percent
of the prey otherwise available to the seabirds."
All told, the latter
half of the 20th century saw a dramatic decline-from about 20
million seabirds to about five million, according to the paper.
Today, many of the so-called bird islands of Peru are largely
devoid of seabirds.
"Birds are very
visible manifestations of the health of an ecosystem,"
said Checkley, a professor in the Integrative Oceanography Division
at Scripps. "This study demonstrates how fishing can profoundly
affect an ecosystem. That's important because we are coming
to a time in the United States and elsewhere in the world when
people recognize that fisheries have to be managed not only
based upon the dynamics of the individual populations, but on
the ecosystem in which they reside. In order to do that we have
to understand how fisheries affect the ecosystem and vice versa."
The
authors say their study would not have been possible without
the prominent leadership and high quality of long-term scientific
data provided by the Peruvian fisheries agency, called the Instituto
del Mar del Peru (IMARPE). The authors are aware of IMARPE's
effort to change from single-species management to an ecosystem-based
approach, and to consider a more reasonable anchovy harvest.
Checkley notes that
although the fishery has profoundly impacted the abundance of
these birds, a reversal is certainly possible.
"The important
point is that we achieve an understanding of the causes of these
population changes over time and manage them accordingly,"
said Checkley. "Once we have the understanding I think
it's really important that management and policy decisions are
based on that understanding."
Note: David Checkley is editor-in-chief of Fisheries Oceanography
but was not involved in the paper's review. The paper was reviewed,
accepted and coordinated by a separate editor.
Media Contacts: Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark
(858) 534-3624
|