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"The concept is exciting," says marine scientist Ed Melvin of Washington Sea Grant. "It creates an economic incentive to improve [fishing methods] and, at the same time, any money that is spent goes directly back into the species."
The idea of compensating for environmental loss has precedence. Several U.S. regulations, namely the Clean Water Act, have compelled businesses to restore wetlands in situations where destroying these areas was deemed unavoidable. But the success of this "wetland neutral" policy is, some might say, a bit mushy. Though restored wetlands occasionally come close to replicating the original in terms of species inclusion and ecological function, a 2001 National Academy of Sciences report on the topic concluded that the goal of "no net loss" of wetlands hadn't been met.
What's more, compensation projects, however promising, can be construed as a fallback for those who might not have to do damage in the first place, says restoration ecologist Joy B. Zedler of the University of Wisconsin at Madison, who led the 2001 report. "I don't like when it becomes an enabling process," Zedler says. "We don't have to damage something, but someone says, 'Hey, I can make something here, and I'm allowed to damage something there.'" The same mindset plagues the "carbon neutral" industry, where people often pay for carbon offsets that are "only estimated, extrapolated, hoped-for or nil" yet consider their debts paid in full, as the Washington Post recently reported.
Comparing birds to birds or turtles to turtles would likely be more straightforward than comparing wetlands, with their complex and shifting systems of biodiversity, or carbon atoms, with their invisible ubiquity. Still, other complications remain. Some of the plan's critics wonder if governments that are supposed to control invasive island species would see the concept as a way to pass the burden onto fisheries. Others ask whether fisheries would pay for onboard observers, which would greatly increase overhead, or if policymakers could convince taxpayers to bear the cost. "You can't have all the fish you want, at bargain-basement prices, and sustainability too," Wilcox says. In other words, we all want to be responsible—until it's time to find out who's responsible.
The main thing to keep in mind, says Wilcox, is that any bycatch neutral strategy should be a third line of defense—behind using the safest possible fishing equipment and avoiding marine life interactions entirely. For that reason, the idea has gained traction among conservationists. A similar concept, involving a tax that would go toward conserving species harmed by bycatch, is being crafted independently by the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization for its upcoming guidelines for responsible fisheries, Gilman says. Another related plan, in which a conservation fee might be imposed on individual ships with high bycatch rates, is even being considered for the Hawaii fishery, he says. As of publication, the fishery had completed the peak of its 2007 season with three turtle interactions to spare.


Comments
This sounds OK for sea birds, but what about leatherback sea turtles? What about big eye tuna? Like always, this seems like a one species solution (or group of species) and NOT an ecosystem solution. Overfishing continues to be the main problem for the marine ecosystem.
Posted by Randall Arauz on December 7,2007 | 11:03AM