I only eat anchovies with Caesar salad, and am rather fond of the tiny fish that add a bit of strong flavor to the romaine…
View More How to eat sardines sustainablyAuthor: Miriam Goldstein
BP oil spill 2-year anniversary: link roundup
Last Friday was the 2 year anniversary of the Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. The ramifications of the vast amount of oil…
View More BP oil spill 2-year anniversary: link roundupOne hundred years of shipping: 1750 to 1850
Ben Schmidt made this wonderful visualization of shipping from 1750-1850 using ship log data. (H/T Metafilter). It’s long, but worth watching. You can see the…
View More One hundred years of shipping: 1750 to 1850Wicked Tuna link roundup
As a followup to Monday’s post on the National Geographic Atlantic bluefin-hunting reality TV show Wicked Tuna, I wanted to highlight some other perspectives. Please…
View More Wicked Tuna link roundupEating Wicked Tuna: A marine scientist tries to figure out what the heck is going on
When I wrote about Wicked Tuna, the National Geographic channel’s Atlantic bluefin tuna fishing reality show (first aired Sunday night), I thought it would be pretty straightforward. Every rating system – Seafood Watch, Sea Choice, Blue Ocean Institute – lists Atlantic bluefin as an “Avoid.” A look through the scientific literature – though I am not a tuna or fisheries expert – showed a vast gap between the fisheries literature, which focuses on bluefin population structure , and the conservation literature, which is trying to sound the alarm about bluefin’s decline. Frankly, I didn’t think it would be terribly controversial to argue that a purportedly conservation-focused organization like National Geographic shouldn’t encourage consumption of Atlantic bluefin tuna.
So I was pretty surprised when two very different scientists, Lee Crockett, Director of Federal Fisheries Policy at the Pew Environment Group and Dr. Molly Lutcavage, Director of the Large Pelagics Research Center at U Mass-Amherst disagreed with my perspective. (I was offered a chance to talk with Crockett about bluefin before the post went up, but the scheduling didn’t work out until afterwards. Dr. Lutcavage reached out to DSN in response to the post.) Both of these tuna experts believe that Wicked Tuna is good publicity for the Atlantic bluefin.
View More Eating Wicked Tuna: A marine scientist tries to figure out what the heck is going onA wicked bad idear: National Geographic hunts bluefin tuna for entertainment
The contradictions of the reality TV show Wicked Tuna, which follows fishers out of Gloucester, Massachusetts, as they use hook-and-line to catch bluefin tuna, are…
View More A wicked bad idear: National Geographic hunts bluefin tuna for entertainmentWho You Calling Spineless?
Fantastic new INVERTEBRATE POWER anthem from UK band the Internauts. H/t @daumari.
View More Who You Calling Spineless?TGIF: Jellyfish with a glowing burgler alarm
Thanks to Ron Etter for the link!
View More TGIF: Jellyfish with a glowing burgler alarmDeep Sea News at Ocean Sciences Meeting 2012
This week 4,000 ocean scientists are descending upon the very landlocked Salt Lake City for the 2012 Ocean Sciences Meeting. This meeting, co-sponsored by The…
View More Deep Sea News at Ocean Sciences Meeting 2012How did Gulf of Maine cod suddenly go from “recovering” to “overfished”?
The Gulf of Maine cod fishery was deemed to be on its way to recovery in 2008, with a chance of reaching “rebuilt” status by…
View More How did Gulf of Maine cod suddenly go from “recovering” to “overfished”?