Saturday, September 7, 2019

Caviar Empty

As Hurricane Dorian presses with some of the strongest fury ever experienced, climate change deniers must be squirming at least a tad. As far as the United States goes, those severe tropical explosive storms have a particular fondness to decimate red states. But man’s proclivity to assault the planet and her resources is hardly relegated simply to acceleration of greenhouse gasses and climate change, however impactful that fact is by itself. We are converting natural habitats to agricultural uses and urban expansion. We are over extracting, over harvesting, over-fishing and crushing our environment to the point where humans just might be building their own scenario for extinction.

All of the above factors combined are particularly damaging, especially to life on planet earth as we know it. “People are putting nature in more trouble now than at any other time in human history, with the risk of extinction looming over 1 million species of plants and animals, scientists said Monday [May 6th]. But it's not too late to fix the problem, according to the United Nations' first comprehensive report on biodiversity. [Over 1000 pages] ‘We have reconfigured dramatically life on the planet,’ report co-chairman Eduardo Brondizio of Indiana University said at a press conference.

“Species loss is accelerating to a rate tens or hundreds of times faster than in the past, the report said. More than half a million species on land ‘have insufficient habitat for long-term survival’ and are likely to go extinct, many within decades, unless their habitats are restored. The oceans are not any better off…

“The report relies heavily on research by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature, or IUCN, which is composed of biologists who maintain a list of threatened species…. The IUCN calculated in March that 27,159 species are threatened, endangered or extinct in the wild out of nearly 100,000 species biologists examined in depth. That includes 1,223 mammal species, 1,492 bird species and 2,341 fish species. Nearly half the threatened species are plants… Scientists have only examined a small fraction of the estimated 8 million species on Earth.

“The report comes up with 1 million species in trouble by extrapolating the IUCN's 25 percent threatened rate to the rest of the world's species and using a lower rate for the estimated 5.5 million species of insects, [Robert Watson, a former top NASA and British scientist who headed the report] said.

“Outside scientists, such as [George Mason University biologist Thomas Lovejoy, who has been called the godfather of biodiversity for his research] and others, said that's a reasonable assessment.

“The report gives only a generic ‘within decades’ time frame for species loss because it is dependent on many variables, including taking the problem seriously, which can reduce the severity of the projections, Watson said… ‘We're in the middle of the sixth great extinction crisis, but it's happening in slow motion,’ said Conservation International and University of California Santa Barbara ecologist Lee Hannah, who was not part of the report.

“Five times in the past, Earth has undergone mass extinctions where much of life on the planet blinked out, like the one that killed the dinosaurs.” CBSNews.com, May 6th. The UN report stopped short of affirming that assertion. But perhaps one particular story, about the world’s unceasing demand for one particular luxury good, will provide one excellent example of man’s apparent lack of concern for species loss. It’s a about one species of fish, the wild sturgeon on the Danube, as reported by Denise Hruby for the September 2nd Los Angeles Times: “For fishermen willing to risk the penalties, catching a female carrying roe is equivalent to winning the lottery, a World Wildlife Fund official said…

“Whatever had gotten caught in Ivan Ivanov’s net, he knew it wasn’t an ordinary fish. The sheer strength with which it was pushing against the Danube River’s current suggested a mass several times Ivanov’s own weight… Reeling it in, the fish towed him and his boat as if they were toys. He thought of the chilly February waters, 40 degrees Fahrenheit. Then, his mind wandered to the fish. ‘It could have killed me,’ Ivanov recalled, still terrified. Only a sturgeon, he reckoned, could put up such a fight. It turned out to be 485 pounds.

“It was an extraordinary catch. Sturgeons have become so rare in the Danube that they have been declared a protected species by several nations. Fishermen face hefty fines or jail sentences for breaking the laws.

“But sturgeons like the one in Ivanov’s net hold the promise of changing one’s life. At that weight, the sturgeon would have carried roughly 110 pounds of roe, which, when cured, is caviar. The world’s most expensive food, caviar retails for as much as $3,000 per pound.” The catch was also illegal. Both Bulgaria, where Ivanov’s fishes, and Romania have banned fishing sturgeon from the Danube, a threat that is both sparsely and laxly enforced, violators often given little more than a warning.

“Six species of sturgeons are native to the Danube River Basin, five are classified as either ‘Endangered’ or ‘Critically Endangered,’ and one ‘Vulnerable’ (Acipenser ruthenus) according to the 2004 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species (IUCN 2004). In fact, one of the five endangered species, the Atlantic sturgeon (Acipenser sturio), is already extinct in the Danube River Basin.” Surprising-Romania.blogspot.com, which supplied the above picture.

But with that much money at stake, even with sustainable sturgeon farms providing product (sturgeon are particularly difficult to raise; it can take 15 years for a single fish), you can bet that it’s not just impoverished fishermen plying their trade. Particularly since this was a most legitimate and fundamental line of work for centuries in times past. Plus river fish are free.

“Criminal syndicates have cynically caught on: All that must be done is to label a wild, illegally sourced caviar as originating from a farm. In 2003, five years after a first big crackdown on the wild caviar trade, the United Nations reported that ‘perhaps no sector of the illegal fauna or flora trade has been criminalized to the extent of that of sturgeon and caviar.’

“In the mid-2000s, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service investigators found that selling illegal caviar had become so lucrative that seven of the East Coast’s 10 biggest caviar traders were illegally importing millions of dollars’ worth annually, unbeknownst to consumers. The U.S. government has signed an international agreement to improve labeling systems to ensure consumers that their caviar is legally sourced and sustainable, but has yet to implement it… Amid spotty enforcement, the market continues to grow, from $360 million in 2017 to a projected $500 million in 2023, according to an analysis by Global Info Research.

“As with any illicit trade, it’s impossible to know just how much illegally sourced caviar is flooding the market, but recent market analysis and DNA tests have shown that it is still found across the globe, according to Jutta Jahrl, who works for the World Wildlife Fund and manages Nature’s Life for Danube Sturgeons project… ‘In volume, it’s got to be less than before, simply because there aren’t many sturgeons left. But it’s clear that it’s devastating for the few that remain,’ Jahrl said.” LA Times.

That’s just one fish story that summarizes the problem. Many varieties of tuna, salmon and sea bass, all very common on menus everywhere, are already suffering from overfishing and changing water temperatures. Too many canaries in too many coal mines. And still, very little is really being done to change this, certainly not remotely enough.

            I’m Peter Dekom, and I really wonder how classrooms a hundred years from now will explain the callous disregard for serious environmental issues, clearly identified and factually reported, in the 20th and 21st centuries.

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