History of commercial fishing
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Food-gathering peoples first obtained fish and shellfish from the shallow water of lakes and along the seashore, from small ponds remaining in inundation areas, from tidal areas, and from small streams. Some authorities believe that in the earliest times fish were rarely caught because of the inadequacy of fishing gear. Shellfish, however, can be gathered easily by hand, and the prehistoric kitchen middens indicate their importance as a food source.
In earliest times most foodstuffs were used at once and not stored, but as expanding populations increased food needs, techniques were developed for preserving fish by drying, smoking, salting, and fermentation. It became desirable to catch large quantities, and specialized equipment was devised. Individual fishing was replaced by collective efforts involving larger, more effective gear.
Fishing equipment and methods improved through the centuries, until bulk fisheries were established in Europe. Herring were caught in huge numbers in northern Europe in the Middle Ages. Cod fishery began on the Grand Banks of Newfoundland even before the Italian explorer John Cabot made his voyage there in 1497. Whaling with large fleets began in the 17th century, both in the Atlantic and in the South Pacific.
Before mechanization came to the fishing industry toward the end of the 19th century, sailing vessels developed to suit conditions and fisheries in different areas. The Grand Banks schooners were the peak of such developments. Sailing from New England, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland, they fished cod during trips lasting up to six months, salting the catch for export to Europe, Africa, and the Caribbean. Individuals fished from small wooden dories, setting and hauling longlines by hand. Portuguese vessels also sailed annually to the Grand Banks, and a number still operated alongside modern steel vessels into the early 21st century. Smaller cutters and yawls worked around Europe, using drift gill nets and setnets. Beam trawls were used extensively in the North Sea and English Channel, particularly for flatfish, being towed downwind under sail and then hauled back to the vessel’s side.
As steam-driven winches came into use, fishing gear increased in size and weight. Steam gradually replaced sail for propulsion in the last quarter of the 19th century. In turn, the internal-combustion engine supplanted steam, although steam trawlers continued operating as late as the 1950s. Smaller craft became motorized in the early 20th century, and the inboard diesel engine became universally adopted—except for the smallest boats, on which gasoline-powered outboard engines remain common.
Larger catches could be obtained by increasing the number or the size of the fishing gear or both. Simple lines armed with one or a few hooks were replaced by longlines with thousands of hooks. Single small traps were combined into systems of hundreds, and pots were set in large quantities. Nets were greatly enlarged; netmaking machines were invented that produced netting in large sheets. Mechanical netmaking brought replacement of the old local netting fibres (linen and hemp) with cotton and hard fibres. But all natural fibres, especially those of cellulose, begin to rot in time; thus, the introduction after World War II of rot-proof nets made of synthetic fibres represented a major advance. Mechanical netmaking remained unchanged for the most part, though for certain fishing gear the usual knotted netting was replaced by knotless netting.
In the beginning of the 1950s, mechanization took a great stride forward in purse seining when the power block was invented for hauling the gear. Another important hauling device was a power-driven drum to haul and store seine nets, gill nets, purse seines, and even the large trawl nets. The Japanese introduced drums in longline fishing for tuna. Another important innovation was the stern chute for stern trawlers, a development made possible by cooperation between naval architects and fishing-gear experts, which permitted large-scale mechanization of gear handling.
An era of rapid technical development in vessel design began with the British factory trawler experiment in the late 1940s, which demonstrated the great advantage of large stern trawlers that processed their catch on board. The idea was quickly developed by countries seeking to fish distant resources, and by the mid-1960s these large vessels (up to 100 metres [328 feet] long) were being operated by the Soviet Union, the United Kingdom, Japan, Poland, East Germany, and Spain.
Equivalent development occurred in the exploitation of the huge resources of small pelagic fish, mainly for conversion into fish meal. In the late 1940s small vessels, using hand-operated natural-fibre nets, fed small shore-based canning and fish meal plants. By the late 1960s large fleets of 25-metre (82-foot) purse seiners were supplying factory mother ships capable of handling up to 300 tons of fish per day. In the first quarter of the 21st century the largest factory ships could process, freeze, and ship as many as 1,500 tons a day.
Concurrently, developing countries strove to introduce more modern fishing technology in order to boost protein supplies for their populations. Most rely heavily on artisanal fishing, using canoes or small boats with simple gear and often working off of open beaches. The introduction of outboard motors, larger boats, and synthetic nets enabled many countries to increase their catches significantly.
In the 40 years following World War II, the annual world fishing catch quadrupled. By the early 1970s, though, it had become apparent that such development was not limitless. Several of the largest resources of pelagic fish harvested by purse seiners suffered collapses generally blamed on overfishing. These included the northeast Atlantic herring, the South Atlantic pilchard, and the West African sardine and associated species. Severe declines in catches of stocks fished by fleets of factory trawlers caused such concern that coastal states pressed for protection of the resources off their shores. In 1972 Iceland became the first country to claim an extended fisheries limit of 80 km (50 miles) and, in 1975, 322 km (200 miles). Other countries followed suit, and in 1983 the Law of the Sea established an exclusive economic zone, or EEZ, of 322 km (200 miles), inside of which each country had exclusive right to the exploitation of marine life. An immediate result was the exclusion from many areas of high-performance long-distance foreign fleets, which were replaced by often less-efficient domestic coastal craft. For example, the British fleet of 168 distant-water trawlers disappeared within a few years, replaced by a fleet of compact coastal-type vessels.
Commercial fishing in areas outside EEZs is managed by Regional Fisheries Management Organizations (RFMOs) and their member countries. Members include bordering countries as well as more distant countries that fish in those waters. Japan, for example, has fleets in the Atlantic and is thus a member of the RFMOs that regulate the region. Many economically important fish species, such as salmon and tuna, are managed by specific RFMOs. Despite these efforts, illegal and unreported fishing is common in many areas, especially in the Indian Ocean.
The oil crisis of the 1970s increased fuel costs as much as 400 percent while fish prices rose by only about 80 percent. This forced many fuel-inefficient vessels, such as many of the U.S. Gulf shrimp trawlers, to tie up or transfer to other fisheries. Resulting development of fuel-efficient vessels, engines, fishing methods, and equipment—including applications of modern sail technology—depended thereafter upon the price of oil.
With the growing importance of managing fisheries to ensure maximum possible benefit from a particular stock, the work of fisheries scientists increased in importance. From a mainly descriptive science in the 19th century, the field evolved, especially after World War II, to develop sophisticated computer analyses based on mathematical models to predict the optimum yields available from fish populations. Still, fishing laws and regulations are difficult to enforce, and international waters are often subject to the tragedy of the commons. In the early 21st century it was estimated that a third of the world’s fisheries were overexploited and that stocks of large fish had dwindled by 90 percent. In 2017 the World Bank noted that nearly 90 percent of the planet’s marine fish stocks were fully exploited or overfished. It blamed this situation on a lack of regulatory frameworks and enforcement in wild-capture fisheries. Ocean pollution—including plastic pollution, oil spills, and ghost fishing gear—and ocean acidification from the absorption of excess carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, which destabilizes marine food webs, are also major threats to the biodiversity and health of marine fisheries. (For a history of the whaling industry, see whaling.)