Overfishing Research Paper

1212 Words3 Pages

With the knowledge that tons of fish are eaten across the world daily one must ask, what are the effects of such a large amount of fish being caught? Overfishing put simply is the capturing of more fish than what an ecosystem or species can handle. Unfortunately for the environment overfishing has been and still is prominent leading to major problems. “Many marine scientists have gone to the extent of saying that the threat faced by our marine ecosystem is much larger than any other environmental threat like increasing pollution” (Jetson). The increase in technological advancements has made fishing much more efficient and allowed fishermen to fish where they once could not, making it easy to cross the line from sustainable fishing to unsustainable fishing. This is …show more content…

To stop overfishing would take the collective power of governments all over the world. Fortunately, the actions taken against overfishing have steadily been increasing but currently only about 1.5% of oceans are considered protected from fishing. The reason it is so hard to fix the problem is that “overfishing has impacted over 85% of the world’s fish resources” and the world has gotten so used to the amount of fish it consumes, it does not want to stop (Kukreja). Not to mention countries such as China ignore laws and regulation having to do with fishing making them one of the leading countries for overfishing. The loss of predators in marine environments has already taken hold as planet wide temperatures are increasing, and coral reefs and ecosystems are dying. If we do not do something before key species are wiped out completely there will be almost no hope for restoring the marine ecosystem. Overfishing negatively effects nearly everything around it, from the air we breathe to coral reefs of the

More about Overfishing Research Paper

Open Document