Now your being very silly - it's not that difficult for the people entrusted with managing our fisheries. Certainly professionals like Hilborn, Parrish and Buxton have a better handle on things than you - as shown by this sarcastic rant of yours. [/quote]
Speak for yourself PJ. Do you understand the statistical fish counting methods or not? How can you be so certain that these people have a grasp of it when you don't understand it yourself? It is not even their job to manage fisheries. You show more faith in their work than they would ever claim to, apparently based on not understanding what they do.
That just goes to show how little you understand how our fisheries actually are managed. Actually NSW fisheries are managed by input reductions (limiting the ability of fishermen to catch fish), rather than output reductions (a total limit on the catch such as a TAC or quota). So in pointing out the potential problems of the latter, caused by them relying on an estimate of the total stock, all you are doing is supporting the status quo. Quote:What you are saying is that we are so poor at managing our fisheries we must lock away a large portion of it just to make sure.
No I'm not. I'm saying that doing so would make us better fisheries managers. Even if we were experts as using the inferior tools there would still be a benefit in using better ones.
We are already using input reductions which are far more equitable and cost effective than marine parks. Ie limits on the no of commercial licenses, gear limits, trip limits, area trawling bans, closed seasons etc. Quote:Despite the fact that Australia has already the most regulated and therefore least fished waters in the world.
You appear to be drawing an odd conclusion here - that the extent of regulation predicts how heavily waters are fished.
I dont need to predict it - it's an empiricle fact that we have the least fished waters in the world. Quote:You then contadict yourself by saying this will increase the yield of the fishery and won't create any significant problem of it's own.
I think I have pointed this out before PJ. There is no contradiction. Improved fisheries management can increase both yield and resilience. You are assuming that there is a fixed relationship between catch and resilience that is unaffected by fisheries management.
That was my point. A lot of the so called evidence for marine parks comes from areas where any change in the management would give a benefit. Quote:There are survey results available on various state fisheries websites.
BUt they show the results of surveys. They do not show how many fish recreational fishermen catch.
Duh, the surveys give an estimate of how many they catch. Quote:Yes and you say you can do this on your own by 'logic' and don't need all those years of pesky study, fieldwork and analysis.
No I don't. I correct some of your many errors of logic, and can obviously do so based on logic alone, but that does not mean my entire argument is based on logic. The consensus statement for example is based on observational evidence and acknowledges the inability to predict the net outcome based on logic alone.
It might be obvious to you, coming from your position of ignorance. Are you familiar with the term 'counter - intuative'?
PS you can't keep running back to the consensus statement. You bandy it around as some kind of protectve sheild against any scruitiny. Quote:Yes I do. Do you think that that could only happen by magic?
Pretty much.
Perhaps you should attempt to understand the mechanisms involved then. Obviously if you think something is impossible, then the evidence won't make any difference to you. It strikes me as odd that you would revert to evidence and appeals to authorities whose arguments you don't even understand to when all you have to show is that the impossible cannot happen. What makes you so certain anyway?
Well I know I have it all over you on this topic. Your inability to give a logically consistent argument, your lack of knowledge of Australian fisheries and the way they are managed, your resorts to ad hominen attacks, labelling and other propaganda techniques and your phoney appeal to authority consisting of the concensus statement scientists does give me quite a bit of certainty! Quote:You can't have it both ways. Not unless the stocks are overfished to start with in which case just about any significant management regime would give a recovery.
Yes you can PJ. You appear to think that total catch is the only control mechanism available to fisheries managers, when is is plainly obvious that there are far more refined tools available and that the best use of those tools could improve both total catches and resilience.
See my earlier statements. We are already using a variety of input reductions, so arguing for them over qutas or TAC's is not making much of an argument for marine parks.