News FuzeArticle Launched:09/20/2007 04:18:31 PM
PDTSAN FRANCISCO—California will ban or severely restrict fishing in
more than 200 square miles of ocean waters off the Central Coast on
Friday as part of a landmark plan to protect marine life.
The first set of 29 marine protected areas, which go into effect in
state waters from Santa Barbara County to San Mateo County, will
include 13 reserves where fishing will be prohibited and 15
conservation areas where some commercial and recreational fishing will
be allowed. Another site in Morro Bay will permit some sport fishing.
"This starts off a program that will help sustain California's
marine resources into the future," said John Ugoretz, a state scientist
who is overseeing the creation of the marine preserves. "We're trying
to make sure that we have healthy fisheries and sustainable resources."
Department of Fish and Game wardens will patrol coastal waters to
enforce the new restrictions, and scientists will study the protected
zones to understand their effects on fish and other marine life.
The state Fish and Game Commission voted to approve the first
network of marine protected areas in April, following more than two
years of often contentious negotiations with environmentalists,
scientists, fishermen and coastal residents.
State regulators plan to create similar networks in four other
regions off California's 1,100-mile coastline. The next set will cover
state waters, which extend three miles from shore, from San Mateo
County to Mendocino County.
Scientists say California's marine protected areas represent a new
approach to saving the world's oceans from overfishing and hope other
states and countries follow suit.
A report in the journal Science last year warned that nearly a third
of the world's seafood species have collapsed and all populations of
fished species could collapse by 2048 if current fishing and pollution
patterns persist.
While traditional fishery management focuses on preserving
individual species, California regulators are now seeking to protect
entire ecosystems that are rich in marine life, from rockfish and
abalone to migrating salmon and whales.
But many fishermen complain that the marine protected areas will
restrict fishing in the most productive areas, and could lead to
overfishing in unprotected regions. They worry the new rules will hurt
the state's commercial and sport fishing industries.
"We think the restrictions are way too severe," said Vern Goehring
of the California Fisheries Coalition. "It restricts and prohibits
fishing in an inordinately large portion of the best fishing areas."
Ugoretz and other scientists say the marine protected areas will
serve as nurseries for fish and invertebrate species and eventually
lead to healthier fisheries.