Fabrice Teletchea and Daniel Pauly
University of Lorraine, France
University of British Columbia, Canada
Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Aquac Res Development
Since 1816, the islands of Saint-Pierre et Miquelon, off Newfoundland have been the last foothold of France in North America. As in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador (Canada), the fishery of the Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) was the raison dâ??ĂȘtre of this small archipelago. Yet, in 1992, the Canadian government decided to close the commercial cod fishery due to the collapse of the stocks. Based on the FAO database of fisheries landings, reconstructed catches from the Sea Around Us (www.seaaroundus.org) and grey literature, this study reappraises the history of the fisheries of these islands since 1950, focusing particularly on the consequences of the moratorium on cod fishing. This study revealed that the fishery fleet based in the Saint-Pierre et Miquelon archipelago changed dramatically, from small traditional boats (â??doriesâ??) to large trawlers reaching up to 50 m. Catches strongly increased in the 1970s and 1980s, reaching 23,800 tonnes in 1991. At its peak, nearly half of the private sector of Saint-Pierre et Miquelon was employed in the fisheries, including 140 fishermen and about 300 land-based persons, mainly in fish processing. In 1993, catches declined to less than 2% and remained very low for four consecutive years. Then, they increased again up to 6,690 tons in 2000 before decreasing ever since. In the past two decades, the number of people involved in the fishery sector has dropped to a few dozens. Today, nearly half of the active population is government employees, which has allowed it to remain relatively stable (at about 6,300 inhabitants). This contrasts to nearby Canadian towns (Fortune, Grand Bank) where more than 20% of the population has left.
Fabrice Teletchea is working on Fisheries from the past 15 years. He had first worked on Fish Taxonomy and then moved to the study of Fish Domestication in Aquaculture. He also developed a comparative framework of the reproductive strategies of European freshwater fish species in order to better understand the different trade-offs observed at the early life stages of fish, to help domesticating them more efficiently.
Email: teletchea@univ-lorraine.fr