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Shifting Baselines

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The Shifting Baselines Blog

JacquetSEED.jpgJennifer Jacquet is a Ph.D. candidate with the Sea Around Us Project at the UBC Fisheries Centre. She works closely with Dr. Daniel Pauly, who coined the term Shifting Baselines, the syndrome on which this blog focuses. <img alt=
Josh Donlan
is a conservation scientist and a Visting Fellow at Cornell University. He often hides out in the backcountry of the Teton Mountains, pondering bygone giant beavers and ground sloths. He also is also the founder and Director of Advanced Conservation Strategies and has a habit of restoring remote islands.

RODodos.jpgScientist turned filmmaker Randy Olson, founder of the Shifting Baselines Ocean Media Project is also a blog contributor.

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July 26, 2008: Randy Olson's film Sizzle premieres on the East Coast at the Woods Hole Film Festival in MA.

July 22, 2008: Jennifer Jacquet gives the talk "A Way Forward in a Sea of Market Based Initiatives to Save Wild Fish" at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, CA.

July 19, 2008: Randy Olson's film Sizzle premieres on the West Coast at Outfest in Hollywood, CA.

July 17, 2008: Jennifer Jacquet gives the talk "In Hot Soup: Shark's Captured in Ecuador's Waters" at the Society for Conservation Biology Annual Meeting in Chattanooga, TN.

July 9, 2008: Jennifer Jacquet gives the talk "Flawed Data, Reef Fisheries, And Food Security: A Close Inspection Of Marine Fisheries Catches in Mozambique, Tanzania, Fiji, And The Solomon Islands" at the 11th International Coral Reef Symposium in Ft. Lauderdale, FL.

June/July 2008: Josh Donlan attends training for his Kinship Conservation Fellowship in Bellingham, WA.

May 2008: Josh Donlan is an author on a new paper in Ambio titled High impact Conservation: Invasive Mammal Eradications from the Islands of Western Mexico.

May 15, 2008: Jennifer Jacquet reviews Bottomfeeder: How to Eat Ethically in a World of Vanishing Seafood at the Tyee.

April 2008: Trade Secrets: Renaming and Mislabeling of Seafood by Jennifer Jacquet and Daniel Pauly is published in Marine Policy.

April 2008: Randy Olson and the Puget Sound Partnership release the flash video Shifting Baselines in the Sound:.

Mar. 2008: Dr. Josh Donlan joins the Shifting Baselines blog.

Jan. 2008 Jennifer Jacquet launches the Eat Like a Pig Seafood Wallet Card EatLikeaPigHalf.jpg

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Spawn of Satan or Holy Mackerel?

Category: New Research
Posted on: January 4, 2008 8:52 AM, by Jennifer L. Jacquet

Goro Yoshizaki wants to breed bluefin tuna from mackerel, a technological challenge that Olivia Judson recently blogged about at the New York Times. She writes:

At first, I thought he was joking. After all, it's a bit like saying you want to breed elephants from hamsters. It's not just that tuna are much bigger than mackerel (a fully grown tuna can weigh more than 1,300 pounds (600 kg) and reach more than 13 feet (4 meters) in length, whereas the typical mackerel is a mere snackerel). It's that part of what makes a mackerel a mackerel is that when they mate and reproduce, you get more mackerel -- not sharks, or minnows, or tuna, or anything else. But after hearing him out, he had me persuaded that his plan might just work.

And continues:

Why, why would anyone want to do all this? Yoshizaki's hope is that his work will help relieve fishing pressure on species, like bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus), that grow relatively slowly and cannot presently be bred in captivity. One solution -- the obvious one -- would be to stop eating tuna. But this seems unlikely to happen. And since mackerel (Scomber japonicus) are small -- you can keep them in fish tanks -- and fecund -- one female can produce 500,000 eggs in one spawning -- transplanting bluefin tuna spermatogonia into mackerel embryos could be a way to breed lots of bluefin tuna quickly.

All of this is a remarkable testament to modern technology. But should we be messing with the fabric of life (something that, let's face it, we're just beginning to understand) or considering sacrifice? Is the absence of the precautionary principle a baseline that hasn't shifted?

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