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2015 Conference

June 24–27, 2015

San Diego, CA

Fisheries

Saturday, June 27, 2015 at 11:00 AM–12:30 PM PDT
201 Center Hall
Type of Session

Full Presentation Panel

Additional abstracts

How to prevent harm: Exploring conflicts within invasive Asian carp management

Adam Kokotovich, PhD

Within the literatures on invasion biology and invasive species management there is increasing recognition of the importance of conflict involving how to define, prioritize, and manage invasive species. One prevalent area of research has explored how conflict over whether a species is considered invasive can result from differing value systems – for example, conflict within or between utilitarian, aesthetic, and moralistic value systems. There remains, however, insufficient work exploring other conflicts that can exist within the assessment and management of invasive species. A better understanding of these conflicts would help identify future research needs, highlight topics in need of societal deliberation, and improve invasive species management. Our research contributes to this work by exploring conflicts surrounding the management of bighead, silver, grass, and black carp (known collectively as Asian carp) in Minnesota.

Asian carp have been progressing up the Mississippi River since escaping into the wild over three decades ago after being introduced to the southern United States for use in aquaculture and wastewater treatment lagoons. While their reproduction front remains in Iowa, an increasing number of individual Asian carp have been found in Minnesota. As the “Land of 10,000 Lakes”, Minnesota’s lakes and rivers are essential for its recreation, tourism, and transportation. Although there is general agreement among government agencies and stakeholder groups that Asian carp are invasive and that actions need to be taken to prevent harm, there remain consequential conflicts concerning Asian carp management in Minnesota. We studied these conflicts using focus groups and in-depth interviews with stakeholders, scientists, and officials from state and federal environmental agencies. We characterize the most important conflicts and tensions, including those involving institutional responsibility, the preventability of invasion, and non-target impacts of management. We conclude by exploring the implications for invasive species management.

 

The Role of Socio-Cultural Institutions in Fisheries Management

The Political Economy of Fishery Collapse


Dr. Peter J. Jacques

This research will attempt to explain structural causes of fishery collapse. Today we are fishing deeper and harder with 10x the power compared to 1950, but only bringing in half of the fish per unit effort as that time period. Meanwhile, fishery experts believe that there needs to be a 50% increase in catch to meet rising demand by mid-century amid growing threats of larger scale collapses that present a new marine frontier of systemic exhaustion(see associated website). As these threats to synthesize with other marine stresses, like acidification and warming, we need a better sense of the larger ultimate causes of fishery collapse. Fisheries collapse due to overharvesting, but what is missing in the literature is a deep political history of drivers of overharvesting and this paper attempts to fill this gap. Using three comparative historical cases of collapse across three centuries, this research explains structural socio-economic conditions that broaden our understanding of crucial dynamics that have a pronounced urgency today where serial depletions and systemic exhaustion characterize the world's fisheries. For example, capitalist relations help explain the very first fishery collapses in the 1800s in the New York region, where American capitalism transitioned and intensified, increasing demand for commodity goods, including oysters. Oyster fisheries collapsed in New York by 1830. In an attempt to fill the demand for oysters, they had to be fished farther down the East Coast, setting off a series of depletions and collapses, including the storied collapse in the Chesapeake after a battle between traditional oyster fishers and the introduction of industrial oyster dredging that eventually replaced the tongers and drove the fishery into oblivion. This work will flesh out these historical conditions to help us contextualize and understand the current condition of the World Ocean.


“Save Bluefin Tuna Now!”: Narratives of Crisis in the Quest for Environmental Justice

Dr. Jennifer E Telesca

To what extent has the rhetoric to “save” Atlantic bluefin tuna been a context for regulatory action on a global scale? Alternatively, to what extent does popular discourse about the bluefin inhibit significant debates that never go public? This paper charts news coverage about overfishing through the iconic Atlantic bluefin tuna and the cagey International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT). Formed by treaty in 1969, ICCAT convenes every year some seventy member states that have agreed to husband the bluefin and other creatures on the high seas, albeit behind closed doors.

Taking The New York Times as a point of departure, this paper documents how news reports about the plight of the bluefin forced ICCAT out of the shadows and into the public eye, unlike other regimes of its kind that govern the oceans. Archival research stretches back a half century to ICCAT’s founding, and traces change in frequency and types of coverage. How is news patterned over time? Who has the authority to speak publically on behalf of ICCAT and the fish in its Convention area? Who is silenced in the process?

After establishing patterns in coverage, this paper shifts to the author’s ethnographic data and writes in what otherwise gets written out of the popular narrative about the bluefin at ICCAT. Based on three years as an ICCAT delegate, I argue that the dominant narrative of the regime's incompetence forecloses important stories about regulatory action on the high seas. Left undisturbed, for example, are the inequalities between the Global North and Global South, including the ability of a handful of ICCAT signatories to control and profit from the supply of the world’s most valuable fish, reproducing the status quo while the animals, decades later, still decline in size and number.



Primary Contact

Dr. Peter J. Jacques, Political Science, University of Central Florida
Adam Kokotovich, PhD, University of Minnesota
Dr. Jennifer E Telesca, Pratt Institute

Presenters

Dr. Peter J. Jacques, Political Science, University of Central Florida
E-mail address (preferred) or phone number
Title of paper

The Political Economy of Fishery Collapse

Adam Kokotovich, PhD, University of Minnesota
E-mail address (preferred) or phone number
Title of paper

How to prevent harm: Exploring conflicts within invasive Asian carp management

Dr. Jennifer E Telesca, Pratt Institute
E-mail address (preferred) or phone number
Title of paper

“Save Bluefin Tuna Now!”: Narratives of Crisis in the Quest for Environmental Justice

Co-Authors

David Andow, PhD, University of Minnesota

Chair, Facilitator, Or Moderators

Dr. Jennifer E Telesca, Pratt Institute
e-mail address (preferred) or phone number

Discussants

Workshop Leaders

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