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Over-fishing in the Great Lakes: the context and history
of the controversy
H.A. Regiera,
T.H. Whillansb, W.J. Christiec,
S.A. Bockingb
aDepartment
of Zoology, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada M5S
1A1
bEnvironmental and Resource
Studies; Trent University, Peterborough, ON, Canada K9J 7B8
cR.R.4, Picton, ON, Canada
KOK 2T0
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Abstract
The issue of over-fishing has spawned controversy in
the Laurentian Great Lakes since the early 1800s. Aboriginal, domestic,
commercial food, aquacultural and recreational fisheries have experienced
a number of different types of over-fishing that have contributed
to the fishing-up sequence in the lakes. Some effects of fish habitat
destruction by many environmental abuses interacted synergistically
with inappropriate fishing practices. The fish communities near
larger settled areas 'hit the wall' ecologically beginning in the
late 1800s. The fisheries of the whole basin 'hit the wall' politically
in the period 1955-1968. Since 1968, a managerial transformation
to an ecosystem approach has occurred, from a modern progressive
approach to a new self-organizing redevelopment approach in which
biotic and abiotic interests are more balanced than previously.
Controversy continues as emergent grass-roots regimes seek alternatives
to remnant and senescent institutional arrangements or seek partnership
arrangements with new governance institutions. © 1999 Published
by Elsevier Science Ltd and AEHMS. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Ecosystem; Stresses; Disintegration; Rehabilitation;
Rights;Responsibilities
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