BC Wants To Know What You Think Of Its Plan To Boost Fish Stocks

The public is being asked to weigh in until October.

Canva /Futurity:https://www.futurity.org /Photo by energepic.com onPexels.com

People up and down B.C.’s coast are being asked to share their opinions about a plan that could create stronger fisheries. 

From now up until late October there will be a series of online and in-person events about Marine Protected Areas, also known as MPAs, a tool that many studies show can boost fish stocks and secure the health of marine ecosystems and habitat. 

Via Gili Shark Conservation

The next public information session about MPAs on the B.C. coast is taking place on September 26 from 1pm to 330pm and you can register for it here. To find information about other events, along with a survey to share your views, visit this website

The reason for these public consultation events is that governments in B.C. are moving forward to protect more than 30,000 square kilometers of marine areas in a region stretching from northern Vancouver Island to the southern tip of Alaska. 

Many studies show when you protect habitats for fish from things like industrial development, overfishing, and poaching, both marine habitat and local fisheries become more s abundant and productive. 

Mary Gleason, via The Nature Conservancy

California for example has more than 120 Marine Protected Areas and this “has helped to boost stocks of rockfish and beds of endangered black abalone since they were introduced a decade ago,” according to the Coast Reporter. “In one group of islands under protection, the density of fish species was 50 per cent higher than outside of the network.”

Some fishermen in B.C. say they’ll believe it when they see it. 

Scene from Don’t Look Up. Credit: Netflix / Via Bon Pote

“The worst-case scenario is something that is preservationist, where there’s only certain kind of access,” fretted Owen Bird, executive director of the Sport Fishing Institute of BC.

But in California “the trends are encouraging,” according to a story in Sports Fishing Magazine published after scientists completed their first major study on the state’s MPAs. 

A recent study from Southern California found that setting aside 35% of habitat as a marine protected area was accompanied by a 225% increase in total catch.”

Setting 35% of marine habitat aside within a marine protected area resulted in a 225% increase in total catch.

A recent study from Southern California found that setting aside 35% of habitat as a marine protected area was accompanied by a “225% increase in total catch.” This led researchers to conclude that marine protected areas “benefited the fishery.”

Another recent study of MPAs found that “there was little to no negative impact” on commercially important fisheries. 

A full report about MPAs along the B.C. coast incorporating local voices and opinions will be published sometime in spring 2023.

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9 Comments

  1. The problem is government directed marine management and their twisted agendas period. You have to take the politics, greed, and capitalism out of the equation and put the science,ethics,and common sense back into the stewardship! Little difference is made if one hand is waving pleasantly and the other is pointing a loaded gun at you.

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