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EE_
6th January 2014, 03:57 AM
It seems the MSM doesn't want to consider connecting this to Fukushima.
People living on the west coast should be demanding the government to do more testing and informing the people.


West Coast sardine crash could radiate throughout ecosystem
If sardine populations don't recover soon, experts warn, the West Coast's marine mammals, seabirds and fishermen could suffer for years.
By Tony Barboza
January 5, 2014, 4:50 p.m.

The sardine fishing boat Eileen motored slowly through moonlit waters from San Pedro to Santa Catalina Island, its weary-eyed captain growing more desperate as the night wore on. After 12 hours and $1,000 worth of fuel, Corbin Hanson and his crew returned to port without a single fish.

"Tonight's pretty reflective of how things have been going," Hanson said. "Not very well."

To blame is the biggest sardine crash in generations, which has made schools of the small, silvery fish a rarity on the West Coast. The decline has prompted steep cuts in the amount fishermen are allowed to catch, and scientists say the effects are probably radiating throughout the ecosystem, starving brown pelicans, sea lions and other predators that rely on the oily, energy-rich fish for food.

If sardines don't recover soon, experts warn, the West Coast's marine mammals, seabirds and fishermen could suffer for years.

The reason for the drop is unclear. Sardine populations are famously volatile, but the decline is the steepest since the collapse of the sardine fishery in the mid-20th century. And their numbers are projected to keep sliding.

One factor is a naturally occurring climate cycle known as the Pacific Decadal Oscillation, which in recent years has brought cold, nutrient-rich water to the West Coast. While those conditions have brought a boom in some species, such as market squid, they have repelled sardines.

If nature is responsible for the decline, history shows the fish will bounce back when ocean conditions improve. But without a full understanding of the causes, the crash is raising alarm.

An assessment last fall found the population had dropped 72% since its last peak in 2006. Spawning has taken a dive too.

In November, federal fishery managers slashed harvest limits by more than two-thirds, but some environmental groups have argued the catch should be halted outright.

"We shouldn't be harvesting sardines any time the population is this low," said Geoff Shester, California program director for the conservation group Oceana, which contends that continuing to fish for them could speed their decline and arrest any recovery.

The Pacific sardine is the ocean's quintessential boom-bust fish. It is short-lived and prolific, and its numbers are wildly unpredictable, surging up and down in decades-long cycles in response to natural shifts in the ocean environment. When conditions are poor, sardine populations plunge. When seas are favorable, they flourish in massive schools.

It was one of those seemingly inexhaustible swells that propelled California's sardine fishery to a zenith in the 1940s. Aggressive pursuit of the species transformed Monterey into one of the world's top fishing ports.

And then it collapsed.

By mid-century sardines had practically vanished, and in the 1960s California established a moratorium on sardine fishing that lasted 18 years. The population rebounded in the 1980s and fishing resumed, but never at the level of its heyday.

Since the 1940s scientists have debated how much of the collapse was caused by ocean conditions and how much by overfishing. Now, researchers are posing the same question.

"It's a terribly difficult scientific problem," said Russ Vetter, director of the Fisheries Resources Division at NOAA's Southwest Fisheries Science Center.

Separate sardine populations off Japan, Peru and Chile fluctuate in the same 50- to 70-year climate cycle but have been more heavily exploited, Vetter said. West Coast sardines are considered one of the most cautiously fished stocks in the world, a practice that could explain why their latest rebound lasted as long as it did. The West Coast's last sardine decline began in 1999, but the population shot back up by the mid-2000s.

In recent years scientists have gained a deeper understanding of sardines' value as "forage fish," small but nutrition-packed species such as herring and market squid that form the core of the ocean food web, funneling energy upward by eating tiny plankton and being preyed on by big fish, seabirds, seals and whales.

Now, they say, there is evidence some ocean predators are starving without sardines. Scarcity of prey is the leading theory behind the 1,600 malnourished sea lion pups that washed up along beaches from Santa Barbara to San Diego in early 2013, said Sharon Melin, a wildlife biologist at the National Marine Fisheries Service.

Melin's research indicates that nursing sea lion mothers could not find fatty sardines, so they fed on less nutritious market squid, rockfish and hake and produced less milk for their young in 2012. The following year their pups showed up on the coast in overwhelming numbers, stranded and emaciated.

http://www.latimes.com/science/la-me-sardine-crash-20140106,0,3689464.story#ixzz2pcPKRk2V

Hitch
6th January 2014, 07:59 AM
It seems the MSM doesn't want to consider connecting this to Fukushima.
People living on the west coast should be demanding the government to do more testing and informing the people.

The good news is people are talking about it here on the west coast. Regarding the sardine population, my untrained eye sees everything as normal. Normal sea life, birds catching fish, seals, etc.

Furthermore, I talked to a guy yesterday who actually spoke to a person from one of the local research institutions. He was informed, directly, that they tested the waters here and did not find any evidence of Fukushima radiation. I could not find a published article supporting this, so it is word of mouth. That's good news though, not only to hear that we might not have a radiation issue yet, but also that people, trained scientists, are actually out here testing and monitoring things.

Again, word of mouth, so take that for what it is.

EE_
6th January 2014, 08:19 AM
The good news is people are talking about it here on the west coast. Regarding the sardine population, my untrained eye sees everything as normal. Normal sea life, birds catching fish, seals, etc.

Furthermore, I talked to a guy yesterday who actually spoke to a person from one of the local research institutions. He was informed, directly, that they tested the waters here and did not find any evidence of Fukushima radiation. I could not find a published article supporting this, so it is word of mouth. That's good news though, not only to hear that we might not have a radiation issue yet, but also that people, trained scientists, are actually out here testing and monitoring things.

Again, word of mouth, so take that for what it is.

I don't know what the real truth is, but someone needs to address these reports.

“We see radiation from Fukushima in soils in Southern California, especially our desert regions” — High concentrations in seaweed prevented harvest this year — Also found in cattle and chicken feed (AUDIO)
Published: January 5th, 2014 at 5:20 pm ET
By ENENews

After Fukushima – Part 2 of 2, Disaster Awareness Preparedness and Planning/News, Views, and Alerts, Dec. 8, 2013:

(The first few minutes is an interview with Atyia Martin, Director of the Office of Public Health Preparedness at the Boston Public Health Commission)

At 6:15 in

Dr. Sherridan Ross, medical doctor, retired professor at University of California – Irvine, member of the Board of Directors at The Compton Community Organic Garden: Over here we’ve done a lot of things to make sure that our food supply has been safe, but it’s also cost us quite a bit. What we’d usually do is harvest a lot of the seaweed for places such as the Central Valley where a lot of our root crops, and also our lettuce and things come from. But because of the high concentration of radiation that’s in the seaweed, we haven’t been able to do that this year. We try to use the coast of California — initially we’d harvest tons of it, because it’s a renewable source, it’s very good, good for sucking up radiation and stuff that’s in the soil — that was our ‘out’.

We do see the radiation from Fukushima in the soils in Southern California, especially in our desert regions. For some reason we’re seeing a lot of that, more prevalent — even though it is in small amounts, it’s still there. […] That’s one of the things that’s been happening with the bioengineering of foods, to get it out of the food source. We’ve been also seeing it in small amounts in a lot of the food sources that we give to our cattle and to our chickens. So these are the things that we’ve been taking note of and things that we’ve been trying to monitor and make sure that it doesn’t get to a higher level within our food sources.

gunDriller
6th January 2014, 09:01 AM
the effect of Fukushima on wildlife will eventually affect the West Coast's ability to support human life.


but as long as the world is willing to expend water and fuel and to consume what the West Coast produces ... the products of Silicon Valley, Hollywood, the US military, and probably about $10 Billion worth of marijuana, the food will still go through the SF Bay area ports and the produce places on Geary will continue selling relatively cheap produce.

probably.


but once the radiation is deemed harmful to Human life ... I wouldn't want to have just paid $2 Million for a condo in Laguna Beach.

Dogman
6th January 2014, 09:30 AM
Have been following the overfishing of the oceans for several years and this sardine decline could very well be because of it. Everything with fins, feet and flippers eat them. Saw some night sat pictures off south america one time that showed a sardine fishing fleet once, the lights they use could be seen from orbit.

Radiation could come into play , but I do not think so on this one.

Hitch
6th January 2014, 12:10 PM
Have been following the overfishing of the oceans for several years and this sardine decline could very well be because of it. Everything with fins, feet and flippers eat them. Saw some night sat pictures off south america one time that showed a sardine fishing fleet once, the lights they use could be seen from orbit.

Radiation could come into play , but I do not think so on this one.

I met a crab fisherman and crew today on the dock. They said it was an unusually slow crab season so far. Everything goes in cycles, nature of life. On another note, may have a date with the crew. I guess she should be called a crab fisherwoman. We both have the same new year's resolution...surfing.

mick silver
6th January 2014, 02:21 PM
hope you dont catch the crabs your first date--)

Cebu_4_2
6th January 2014, 04:32 PM
hope you dont catch the crabs your first date--)

Vinegar would be your best friend in that case.

Hitch
6th January 2014, 05:03 PM
Vinegar would be your best friend in that case.

Will that work on Fukushima crabs? The worst kind. I'll be careful folks, I promise. :)

Blink
6th January 2014, 08:11 PM
How many examples do we need to put 2 and 2 together. Sardines for one,

(NaturalNews) All up and down the West Coast of the United States, millions of starfish are turning up dead from a mysterious illness that experts have generally dubbed "starfish wasting disease," which involves the creatures' bodies shriveling up and turning into goo. According to reports, this mass die-off event, which is being recorded as far north as Alaska and as far south as Southern California, and everywhere in between, is the largest ever on record.

Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/043271_starfish_wasting_disease_West_Coast_radiati on.html#ixzz2pgNDpuB6


Radioactive tuna: Low levels of Fukushima radioactive cesium found in West Coast tuna

Read more: http://www.wptv.com/dpp/news/national/radioactive-tuna-low-levels-of-fukushima-radioactive-cesium-found-in-west-coast-tuna#ixzz2pgNagike