Quote:What you are trying to say is there is such a thing as pure research.
No PJ, I'm saying that any one individual scientific paper is not going to prove anything. They are all just a little piece of the puzzle. Picking one at random and criticising it for not covering everything is absurd.
Quote:What he disagrees with is the conclusions being drawn from it for fisheries and their management.
No-one is drawing any conclusions from a single paper, except perhaps the anti marine aprk lobby. It is an absurd strawman argument. Ray et al have a rediculous habit of holding up one paper and rpetending that all the marine aprk science hangs off it, so that any shortcoming of the one paper is a shortcoming of the whole scientific community.
Quote:No attempt was made to draw interpretations from fisheries data to see if it supported this theory and a good paper would do this.
No it wouldn't. Not if that wasn't what the paper was about. That's not how it works PJ.
Quote:The problem is also the way this paper has been picked up and widely cited by the pro-marine park bandwagon.
Sounds like a strawman to me. Perhaps you should take it up with the people who cite it, if you think they are doing it wrong. It is nothing short of stupid to pretend that the concept of selective pressures applying to fish in the same way it applies to all other living organisms hangs off a single paper.
Quote:Seeing it is so widely cited in this way there is nothing wrong with Ray using it as an example. You just spent pages using this theory as your only justification for marine parks as a fisheries management tool.
The theory yes. But to suggest it somehow hangs off this one paper is absurd. The impact of selective pressure on populations is well known. It has been fundamental to farming for millenia. It's not like we even need to prove the principle all over again for fish before we take the problem seriously.
Quote:Yes but the trouble with the theory is they can't find any such effect.
But they can. If you would stop pretending that it all hangs off one paper you would see that.
Also, are you familiar with the concept that absence of evidence is not evidence of absence? Are you seriously suggesting that we assume fish are somehow immune to selective pressures until we pass some kind of arbitrary absolute proof standard? This goes back to the absurd double standard you apply. You assume marine aprks are bad, despite all the evidence, and accept nothing less than absolute proof. But for minimum sizes it is the opposite. You throw common sense out the window and assume something that is obviously going to have a detrimental impact is good until you get absolute proof otherwise.
You are sacrificing common sense to cling to your position. You are like the greedy farmer who sends his fattest cattle off to slaughter each year because they get the best price, then argues endlessly with anyone who suggests he does otherwise because they cannot meet his standard of proof. You cannot demand that other people continue doing something that is clearly stupid until they have met whatever arbitrary burden of proof you impose on them. Common sense must come first.
pjb05 wrote on Mar 17
th, 2009 at 7:56am:
tallowood wrote on Mar 17
th, 2009 at 7:42am:
Yep, fat lot of good the EPA's green placebo did (ie the Moreton Bay Marine Park). The EPA should stick to contolling pollution and leave fisheries management to the DPI scientists.
So we shouldn't have marine parks because they don't stop oil spills? Is that supposed to sound rational? Perhaps you think we could have averted the oil spill with bag limits and minimum sizes.