Jacques Cousteau, Rachel
Carson, and ... Carl Safina? Yes,
this is a list of authors of classics
of marine ecology, and reviewers
really are bandying Safina’s name
around with such august company.
Elliott A. Norse, president
of the Marine Conservation
Biology Institute, says it straight
out: “the best writer about the sea
since Rachel Carson.” Stephen
Colwell, executive director of the
dive organization CORAL, says
Safina’s book, Song for a Blue
Ocean, “captures the good, the
bad and the ugly of what is going
on in the world’s oceans.” Bert
Jones and Maurine Shimlock,
authors of Secret Sea, had the
strongest reaction of all: by the
time they’d reached the end,
they’d decided to give up eating
fish — even sushi!
For those of us who aren’t
ready to make a commitment of
that magnitude, a sliding scale to
let us know just how much
damage we’re doing appeared in
a past issue of Audubon. The scale,
which Safina himself prepared,
ranks marine species from
populations in abundant supply to
species in serious trouble. It
considers such issues as the
species’ current status, its management
history, and ancillary bycatch or habitat concerns to
arrive at a recommendation of
which fish to order for dinner and
which to shun.
Sharks, swordfish, and shrimp
top the list of fish in trouble,
followed closely by orange roughy,
grouper, and Atlantic groundfishes
such as cod and haddock.
All suffer from scant populations,
histories of poor fisheries management,
and substantial bycatch
concerns. Sharks top the list of atrisk
species for many “dull”
reasons — including overfishing,
slow species recovery from
overfishing, and turtle bycatch in
gillnets — and a few memorable
ones, including exploitation of
shark cartilage for “miracle
drugs,” $90-a-bowl shark-fin soup,
and the fact that all too many of
the sharks caught for soup are
killed for their fins and discarded.
Swordfish are popular for pricey
steaks, which has depleted the
species, and shrimp have the
highest bycatch of any of the
world’s fishes: for every pound of
shrimp sold, an average of seven
pounds of other sea creatures was
killed and thrown overboard.
Even farmed shrimp are a problem,
with farms being such serious
polluters that the Indian government
recently ordered more than
100 of them closed. Orange
roughy, a “trendy” fish unheard of
until a few years ago, doesn’t
spawn until after age twenty and
may live to reach 100, so depleted
populations take many years to
recover. Similarly, grouper change
sex as they age. While this may
well give the term “my old man”
new meaning, it also means that
heavy fishing, which claims mostly
older fish, could wipe out nearly
an entire gender.
Species that fall into the
middle-of-the-road or gray area
are often fish that have been
depleted in some subgroups or
regions but not in others. Bluefin
tuna, for example, is so severely
overfished to supply Japan’s sushi
bars that a single fish often sells
for $10,000 to $20,000. Conversely,
most tuna sold in the U.S.
as “chunk light” is either skipjack
tuna, which is still in substantial
supply, or yellowfin, a declining,
but not depleted, species. “White”
or albacore tuna, long the “politically
correct” variety because its
harvest did not involve substantial
dolphin bycatch, is also a declining
species. Likewise, red snapper
is depleted, while other snapper
populations are in fair shape. And
many salmon populations are
deemed at substantial risk,
although nearly 50 percent of all
salmon sold is farmed and
Alaskan salmon populations are
still considered healthy.
While ordering dolphin
(mahi mahi) might make you feel
as if you’re eating Flipper, populations
are still in ample supply,
although fishing is intensifying.
And species such as squid, crabs,
and striped bass are abundant,
adequately managed in general,
and have low to moderate bycatch
concerns, putting them at the top
of Safina’s list of fish to be eaten
with a clear conscience.
Of course, if you’d like to
know why some populations
flourish while others decline, you
should consider reading Song for a
Blue Ocean itself. Although Colwell
insists that it’s “not a doom and
gloom story,” Jones seems to have
his doubts. “If you ever want to eat
fish again,” he cautions, “don’t
read this book.”
— John Q. Trigger