Background and interpretation of the ‘Marine Trophic Index’ as a measure of biodiversity

Author:

Pauly Daniel1,Watson Reg1

Affiliation:

1. Sea Around Us Project, Fisheries Centre, University of British Columbia, 2259 Lower Mall, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z4

Abstract

Since the demonstration, in 1998, of the phenomenon now widely known as ‘fishing down marine food webs’, and the publication of a critical rejoinder by Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) staff, a number of studies have been conducted in different parts of the world, based on more detailed data than the global FAO fisheries statistics originally used, which established the validity and ubiquity of this phenomenon. In this contribution, we briefly review how, rather than being an artefact of biased data, this phenomenon was in fact largely masked by such data, and is in fact more widespread than was initially anticipated. This is made visible here by comparing two global maps of trophic level (TL) changes from the early 1950s to the present. The first presents the 50-year difference of the grand mean TL values originally used to demonstrate the fishing down effect, while the second is based on means above a cut-off TL (here set at 3.25), thus eliminating the highly variable and abundant small pelagic fishes caught throughout the world. Based on this, we suggest that using mean TL as ‘Marine Trophic Index’ (MTI), as endorsed by the Convention on Biological Diversity , always be done with an explicitly stated cut-off TL (i.e. cut MTI), chosen (as is the case with our proposed value of 3.25) to emphasize changes in the relative abundance of the more threatened, high-TL fishes. We also point out the need to improve the taxonomic resolution, completeness and accuracy of the national and international fisheries catch data series upon which the cut MTI is to be based.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference57 articles.

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2. Toward a comparative evaluation of human impacts on fishery ecosystems of enclosed and semi‐enclosed seas

3. How Pervasive is "Fishing Down Marine Food Webs"?

4. CBD 2004 Annex I decision VII/30. The 2020 biodiversity target: a framework for implementation p. 351. Decisions from the Seventh Meeting of the Conference of the Parties of the Convention on Biological Diversity Kuala Lumpur 9–10 and 27 February 2004. Montreal: Secretariat of the CBD.

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