Quote:But you just said you want to eliminate what you termed as 'underfishing' in NSW. That means increasing fishing does it not?
It means increased catches. There is nothing in my claims that suggests the bulk of this benefit should go to commercial fishermen. It should be fairly obvious that the bulk of the benefit goes to recreational fishermen.
Quote:Fishing is still going to go on under a marine park regime. You are saying you want bigger catches to boot!
Yes I do. What is your point?
Quote:Yes you keep using that phrase - what do you actually mean by "political responsibilities"?
He seemed to think that responsibilities imposed on a government to counter threats to biodivirsity was intended to limit the government to acting on clearly defined threats. He mistook a minimum duty of care for a limitation on care.
From the catch limits thread:
pjb05 wrote on Jun 20
th, 2009 at 8:33am:
You offer no references to back your claims except overseas studies and a dubious consensus statement.
Do you think that Australian fish are somehow different?
Quote:You use these references as 'proof'
You are the one who goes on about proof, not me. I use them as justification. I use them as the basis for sound management practices.
Quote:but show no consideration of the actual fishing pressure and whether traditional techniques are actually working
Sure they are working, but so what? I am not promoting marine parks on the basis that they don't work, but on the basis that they can be improved upon. You seem to keep getting hung up on this issue.
Quote:Duh, you want to establish marine parks in Australia do you not?
Yes. Now what statement of mine would you like me to reference?
From the minimum sizes thread:
pjb05 wrote on Jun 20
th, 2009 at 12:59pm:
Also do you realise that you are holding on to two opposing ideals at the same time. On one hand you say marine parks will give a greater yeild and on the other you use preservationist arguments about selective pressures and biodiversity.
I wouldn't call them opposing ideals. I would call them competing goals, or tradeoffs. Like I said (in another thread a few days ago I think), marine parks allow you to improve on both measures at once. However, I do not focus on the 'preservationist' argument to promote my approach to marine parks as my approach seeks to maximise the benefit to fishermen. Plus, the conservation benefit is usually obvious and unquestioned. However, that doesn't mean that I won't respond to your claims that marine parks are harmful from an environmental perspective. I suspect that is where your confusion arises.
pjb05 wrote on Jun 20
th, 2009 at 5:47pm:
Quote:Two, even once the stocks are recovered, the catches must be restricted to more conservative levels to compensate for the problems inherent in the management approach used.
Whats wrong with that?
Underfishing remember? It is the inevbitable result of trying to manage a fishery sustainably with inferior tools.
Quote:Experienced fisheries biologists like Prof Kearney and Buxton will tell you that you couldn't come up with a less cost effective way than marine parks!
Bob Kearney obviously has serious difficulties understanding the political aspects. If Prof Buxton made any such generalistations about marine parks, they were totally unjustified.