Date: December 10, 2018
Source: Stockholm University
Seals
feeding on fish does not decrease fish stocks of Baltic cod, herring and sprat
the most -- climate change, nutrient load and fisheries do, shows a new study
from Stockholm University.
It has
long been debated whether the seal predation of fish play a major role in the
fish decline in the Baltic Sea compared to human fishing. The debate escalated
worldwide since conservation efforts to protect seals and fish-eating birds
resulted in increased number of them.
A new
study taking into account human pressures on the environment, shows that the
seals are not the main problem on commercial fish stocks in the open water of
the Baltic Sea.
"We
currently have 30,000 grey seals in the Baltic Proper, but we can even have
more than 100,000 seals and it will still not affect the amount of cod
negatively as much as climate change, nutrient load and fisheries. The Baltic
is very sensitive to human impact," says David Costalago, a former
postdoctoral researcher at Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant
Sciences, Stockholm University.
The cod
population size for example, decreased more by environmental change and by
human fishing, than the seals eating the fish. How much fish the seals eat is
also affected by the climate and nutrient load.
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