FROM OCEANOGRAPHY TO FISHERIES BIOLOGY
1.Mark Kurlansky, Cod: A Biography of the Fish That Changed the World (New York: Penguin Books, 1998).
DANIEL’S FIRST AFRICAN EXPERIENCE
1.Jean de la Fontaine, “The Animals Seized With the Plague,” in La Fontaine’s Fables, trans. Robert Thomson (Paris: Chenu, 1806).
2.Daniel Pauly, “Report on the U.S. Catfish Industry: Development, Research, Production Units, Marketing and Associated Industries,” in Neue Erkenntnisse auf dem Gebiet der Aquakultur, vol. 16, Arbeiten des Deutschen Fischereiverbandes, ed. K. Tiews (Hamburg: Deutscher Fischerei-Verband, 1974), 154–67. [In German.]
DEVELOPMENT AID IN INDONESIA
1.Ludwig von Bertalanffy, Theoretische Biologie—Zweiter Band: Stoffwechsel, Wachstum (Bern: A. Francke Verlag, 1951).
2.Daniel Pauly, “On the Interrelationships Between Natural Mortality, Growth Parameters, and Mean Environmental Temperature in 175 Fish Stocks,” ICES Journal of Marine Science 39, no. 2 (1980): 175–92.
3.Ray Hilborn, “Current and Future Trends in Fisheries Stock Assessment and Management,” South African Journal of Marine Science 12, no. 1 (1992): 975–88.
BIRTH OF A CAREER IN THE PHILIPPINES
1.Robert E. Ricklefs, Ecology (New York: Chiron Press, 1973).
2.Daniel Pauly, “Theory and Management of Tropical Multispecies Stocks: A Review, With Emphasis on the Southeast Asian Demersal Fisheries,” ICLARM Studies and Reviews 1 (1979).
SAN MIGUEL BAY AND THE SOCIAL DIMENSION OF FISHERIES
1.Ian R. Smith and Daniel Pauly, “Resolving Multigear Competition in Nearshore Fisheries,” ICLARM Newsletter 6, no. 4 (1983): 11–18.
2.Daniel Pauly, “Some Definitions of Overfishing Relevant to Coastal Zone Management in Southeast Asia,” Tropical Coastal Area Management 3, no. 1 (1988): 14–15.
3.Thomas Malthus, An Essay on the Principle of Population (London: J. Johnson, 1798).
4.Daniel Pauly, “On Malthusian Overfishing,” Naga: The ICLARM Quarterly 13, no. 1 (1990): 3–4.
5.Pauly, “Some Definitions of Overfishing.”
6.Daniel Pauly, “Major Trends in Small-Scale Marine Fisheries, With Emphasis on Developing Countries, and Some Implications for the Social Sciences,” MAST 4, no. 2 (2006): 7–22.
7.Daniel Pauly, “Rebuilding Fisheries Will Add to Asia's Problems,” Nature 433, no. 457 (2005), doi.org/10.1038/433457a.
A PACIFIC HEROINE
1.Siebren C. Venema, Jörgen M. Christensen, and Daniel Pauly, “Training in Tropical Fish Stock Assessment: A Narrative of Experience,” in Contributions to Tropical Fisheries Biology, ed. Siebren C. Venema, Jörgen M. Christensen, and Daniel Pauly, FAO Fisheries Report 389 (1988): 1–15.
2.Jorge Csirke, John F. Caddy, and S. Garcia, “Methods of Size-Frequency Analysis and Their Incorporation in Programs for Fish Stock Assessment in Developing Countries,” in Length-Based Methods in Fisheries Research, ed. Daniel Pauly and G. R. Morgan, ICLARM Conference Proceedings 13 (1987).
FISH STORIES IN PERU
1.Daniel Pauly and Isabel Tsukayama, “On the Seasonal Growth, Monthly Recruitment and Monthly Biomass of the Peruvian Anchoveta From 1961 to 1979,” in Proceedings of the Expert Consultation to Examine Changes in Abundance and Species Composition of Neritic Fish Resources. San José, Costa Rica, 18–29 April 1983, ed. G. D. Sharp and J. Csirke, FAO Fisheries Report 291, vol. 3 (1983): 987–1004.
2.Reuben Lasker, “The Relations Between Oceanographic Conditions and Larval Anchovy Food in the California Current: Identification of Factors Contributing to Recruitment Failure,” Rapports et Procès-Verbaux des Réunions Cons. Int. Explor. Mer. 173 (1978): 212–30.
3.Daniel Pauly and Isabel Tsukayama, eds., The Peruvian Anchoveta and Its Upwelling Ecosystem: Three Decades of Change (Callao, Peru: Instituto del Mar del Perú, 1987), 335.
4Daniel Pauly, “Managing the Peruvian Upwelling Ecosystem: A Synthesis,” in Pauly and Tsukayama, The Peruvian Anchoveta and Its Upwelling Ecosystem, 325.
5.Daniel Pauly, Peter Muck, Jaime Mendo, and Isabel Tsukayama, eds., The Peruvian Upwelling Ecosystem: Dynamics and Interactions, ICLARM Conference Proceedings 18 (1989).
6.Arnaud Bertrand, Renato Guevara-Carrasco, Pierre Soler, Jorge Csirke, and Francisco Chavez, eds., “The Northern Humboldt Current System: Ocean Dynamics, Ecosystem Processes, and Fisheries,” Progress in Oceanography 79, no. 2–4 (October–December 2008): 95–412.
7.Pierre Fréon et al., “Interdecadal Variability of Anchoveta Abundance and Overcapacity of the Fishery in Peru,” Progress in Oceanography 79, no. 2–4 (October–December 2008): 401–12.
8.Alan R. Longhurst, Ecological Geography of the Sea (Cambridge, MA: Academic Press, 1998).
9.Alan R. Longhurst and Daniel Pauly, Ecology of Tropical Oceans (Cambridge, MA: Academic Press, 1987).
10.Daniel Pauly, “Why Squid, Though Not Fish, May Be Better Understood by Pretending They Are,” South African Journal of Marine Science 20, no. 1 (1998): 47–58.
NATURE IN A BOX
1.Knud P. Andersen and Erik Ursin, “A Multispecies Extension to the Beverton and Holt Theory of Fishing, With Accounts of Phosphorus Circulation and Primary Production,” Medd. Dan. Fisk. Havunders 7 (1977): 319–435.
2.Taivo Laevatsu and Herbert A. Larkins, eds., Marine Fisheries Ecosystem: Its Quantitative Evaluation and Management (England: Fishing News Books, 1981).
3.Jeffrey J. Polovina, “Foreword: The First ECOPATH,” in Trophic Models of Aquatic Ecosystems, ed. V. Christensen and D. Pauly, ICLARM Conference Proceedings 26, 1993.
4.Polovina, “Foreword: The First ECOPATH.”
5.Daniel Pauly, “On the Sex of Fish and the Gender of Scientists,” Naga: The ICLARM Quarterly 12, no. 2 (1989): 8–9.
6.William E. Odum and Eric J. Heald, “The Detritus-Based Food Web of an Estuarine Mangrove Community,” Res. Chem. Biol. Estuar. Syst. 1 (1975): 265–86.
7.Sylvain Bonhommeau, Laurent Dubroca, Olivier Le Pape, Julien Barde, David M. Kaplan, Emmanuel Chassot, and Anne-Elise Nieblas, “Eating Up the World’s Food Web and the Human Trophic Level,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 110, no. 51 (2013): 20617–20.
8.Robert E. Ulanowicz, Growth and Development: Ecosystems Phenomenology (New York: Springer, 1986).
9.Villy Christensen and Daniel Pauly, “ECOPATH II–A Software for Balancing Steady-State Ecosystem Models and Calculating Network Characteristics,” Ecological Modelling 61, no. 3–4 (1992): 169–85.
10.Robert E. Ulanowicz, “Foreword: Inventing the Ecoscope,” in Trophic Models of Aquatic Ecosystems, ed. V. Christensen and D. Pauly, ICLARM Conference Proceedings 26, 1993.
11.Christensen and Pauly, Trophic Models of Aquatic Ecosystems.
12.Daniel Pauly, Méthodes pour l’évaluation des ressources halieutiques, trans. J. Moreau (Toulouse, France: Collection Polytech de l’INP de Toulouse, 1997).
13.Maria Lourdes Distor Palomares, “La consommation de nourriture chez les poissons: Étude comparative, mise au point d’un modèle prédictif et application à l’étude des réseaux trophiques,” (doctoral thesis, Toulouse INP, 1991).
14.Carl J. Walters, Adaptive Management of Renewable Resources (New York: MacMillan, 1986).
15.Ray Hilborn and Carl J. Walters, Quantitative Fisheries Stock Assessment and Management (New York: Chapman and Hall, 1991).
16.Carl Walters, Villy Christensen, and Daniel Pauly, “Structuring Dynamic Models of Exploited Ecosystems From Trophic Mass-Balance Assessments,” Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries 7, no. 2 (1997): 139–72.
17.Chiara Piroddi, Marta Coll, Camino Liquete, Diego Macias, Krista Greer, Joe Buszowski, Jeroen Steenbeek, Roberto Danovaro, and Villy Christensen, “Historical Changes of the Mediterranean Sea Ecosystem: Modelling the Role and Impact of Primary Productivity and Fisheries Changes Over Time,” Scientific Reports 7 (2017).
FOR ALL THE FISH IN THE WORLD
1.Daniel Pauly and Rainer Froese, “FishBase: Assembling Information on Fish,” Naga: The ICLARM Quarterly 9, no. 4 (1991): 10–11.
2.Robert A. McCall and Robert M. May, “More Than a Seafood Platter,” Nature 376 (1995): 735.
3.Nicolas Bailly, “Why There May Be Discrepancies in the Assessment of Scientific Names Between the Catalog of Fishes and FishBase Version 2,” WorldFish Center—FishBase Consortium—FishBase Information and Research Group, Inc., May 6, 2010, fishbase.us/Nomenclature/FBCofFNames.php.
4.Maria L. D. Palomares and Nicolas Bailly, “Organizing and Disseminating Marine Biodiversity Information: The FishBase and SeaLifeBase Story,” in Ecosystem Approaches to Fisheries: A Global Perspective, ed. Villy Christensen and Jay Maclean (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2011), 24–46.
5.See: Rainer Froese, “The Science in FishBase,” in Christensen and Maclean, Ecosystem Approaches to Fisheries, 47–52.
6.Kostantinos I. Stergiou and Athanassios C. Tsikliras, “Scientific Impact of FishBase: A Citation Analysis,” in Fishes in Databases and Ecosystems, ed. Maria L. D. Palomares, Kostantinos I. Stergiou, and Daniel Pauly, Fisheries Centre Research Reports 14, no. 4 (2006): 2–6.
THE BIG LEAGUES
1.Daniel Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces: How Fishing Impacts Marine Ecosystems (Washington, DC: Island Press, 2010), 1.
2.Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces, 2.
3.Peter M. Vitousek, Paul R. Ehrlich, Anne H. Ehrlich, and Pamela A. Matson, “Human Appropriation of the Products of Photosynthesis,” BioScience 36, no. 6 (1986): 368–73.
4.Vitousek et al., “Human Appropriation of the Products of Photosynthesis.”
5.John H. Lawton, “What Will You Give Up?” Oikos 71, no. 3 (1994): 353–54.
6.Stuart L. Pimm, The World According to Pimm: A Scientist Audits the Earth (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2001).
7.T. Radford, “New Calculations by Scientists Show There Can Be No Winners in Fight for Dwindling Catches,” Guardian, March 16, 1995; M. Ritter, “Global Fishing Taking Up Much of Ocean’s Algae, Study Says,” Associated Press, March 16, 1995. Quoted in Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces, 25–27.
8.Daniel Pauly, “Anecdotes and the Shifting Baseline Syndrome of Fisheries,” Trends in Ecology and Evolution 10, no. 10 (1995): 430.
9.Daniel Pauly, “The Ocean’s Shifting Baseline,” April 2010, TED Talk, video, 8:47, ted.com/talks/daniel_pauly_the_ocean_s_shifting_baseline.
10.Dietmar Rost, Wandel (v)erkennen: Shifting Baselines und die Wahrnehmung umweltre-levanter Veränderungen aus wissenssoziologischer Sicht (Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 2013). [In German.] A short account of his ideas in English may be found in Dietmar Rost, Shifting Baselines: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Long-Term Change Perception and Memory, 2018, nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-56971-0.
11.Kurlansky, Cod: A Biography.
12.Pauly, “Anecdotes and the Shifting Baseline Syndrome.”
13.Jeremy Jackson, “How We Wrecked the Ocean,” April 2010, TED Talk, video, 18:04, ted.com/talks/jeremy_jackson.
14.Jeremy Jackson and Jennifer Jacquet, “The Shifting Baselines Syndrome: Perception, Deception, and the Future of Our Oceans,” in Christensen and Maclean, Ecosystem Approaches to Fisheries, 128–41.
15.Jeremy B. Jackson, “Reefs Since Columbus,” Coral Reefs 16, no. 1 (1997): S23–32.
16.Jeremy B. C. Jackson, Michael X. Kirby, Wolfgang H. Berger, Karen A. Bjorndal, Louis W. Botsford, Bruce J. Bourque, Roger H. Bradbury et al., “Historical Overfishing and the Recent Collapse of Coastal Ecosystems,” Science 293, no. 5530 (2001): 629–37.
17.Heike K. Lotze and Inka Milewski, “Two Centuries of Multiple Human Impacts and Successive Changes in a North Atlantic Food Web,” Ecological Applications 14, no. 5 (2004): 1428–47.
18.Heike K. Lotze, “Radical Changes in the Wadden Sea Fauna and Flora Over the Last 2,000 Years,” Helgoland Marine Research 59, no. 1 (2005): 71–83.
19.Heike K. Lotze, Hunter S. Lenihan, Bruce J. Bourque, Roger H. Bradbury, Richard G. Cooke, Matthew C. Kay, Susan M. Kidwell, Michael X. Kirby, Charles H. Peterson, and Jeremy B. C. Jackson, “Depletion, Degradation, and Recovery Potential of Estuaries and Coastal Seas,” Science 312, no. 5781 (2006): 1806–9.
20.Heike K. Lotze and Boris Worm, “Historical Baselines for Large Marine Animals,” Trends in Ecology and Evolution 24, no. 5 (2009): 254–62.
21.Andrea Sáenz-Arroyo, Callum M. Roberts, Jorge Torre, Micheline Cariño-Olvera, and Roberto Ramón Enríquez Andrade, “Rapidly Shifting Environmental Baselines Among Fishers of the Gulf of California,” Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences 272, no. 1575 (2005): 1957–62.
22.Ian Smith, “Retreat and Resilience: Fur Seals and Human Settlement in New Zealand,” in The Exploitation and Cultural Importance of Sea Mammals, ed. Gregory Monks (Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2005), 6–18.
FISHING DOWN MARINE FOOD WEBS
1.Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces, 32.
2.Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces, 32.
3.Daniel Pauly, Villy Christensen, Johanne Dalsgaard, Rainer Froese, and Francisco Torres, “Fishing Down Marine Food Webs,” Science 279, no. 5352 (1998): 860–63.
4.Pauly et al., “Fishing Down Marine Food Webs,.”
5.See also: Konstantinos I. Stergiou and Villy Christensen, “Fishing Down the Food Web,” in Christensen and Maclean, Ecosystem Approaches to Fisheries, 72–88.
6.Timothy R. Parsons, Masayuki Takahashi, and Barry Hargrave, Biological Oceanographic Processes (Oxford: Pergamon Press, 1984).
7.William K. Stevens, “Man Moves Down the Marine Food Chain, Creating Havoc,” New York Times, February 10, 1998.
8.Stevens, “Man Moves Down the Marine Food Chain.”
9.Nancy Baron, “The Scientist As Communicator,” in Christensen and Maclean, Ecosystem Approaches to Fisheries, 295–303.
10.Baron, “The Scientist As Communicator.”
11.Bénédicte Martin, “Comment scientifiques et écologistes peuvent travailler ensemble. L’exemple de la surpêche,” Reporterre, September 14, 2015.
12.Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces, 45.
13.John F. Caddy, Jorge Csirke, Serge Garcia, and Richard Grainger, with response by Daniel Pauly, Rainer Froese, and Villy Christensen, “How Pervasive Is ‘Fishing Down Marine Food Webs’?” Science 282, no. 5393 (November 20, 1998): 1383.
14.Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces, 49.
15.Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces, 56.
16.Trevor A. Branch, Reg Watson, Elizabeth A. Fulton, Simon Jennings, Carey R. McGilliard, Grace T. Pablico, Daniel Ricard, and Sean R. Tracey, “The Trophic Fingerprint of Marine Fisheries,” Nature 468, no. 7322 (2010): 431–35.
17.Trevor A. Branch, “Fishing Impacts on Food Webs: Multiple Working Hypotheses,” Fisheries 40, no. 8 (2015): 373–75.
THE SEA AROUND US
1.Joshua Reichert, “Foreword,” in Global Atlas of Marine Fisheries: A Critical Appraisal of Catches and Ecosystem Impacts, ed. Daniel Pauly and Dirk Zeller (Washington, DC: Island Press, 2016), xi.
2.Villy Christensen, Sylvie Guénette, Johanna J. Heymans, Carl J. Walters, Reginald Watson, Dirk Zeller, and Daniel Pauly, “Hundred-Year Decline of North Atlantic Predatory Fishes,” Fish and Fisheries 4, no. 1 (2003): 1–24.
3.Jeffrey A. Hutchings, “Ransom Aldrich Myers (1952–2007): In Memoriam,” Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 65, no. 1 (2008): xii–xix.
4.Hutchings, “Ransom Aldrich Myers.”
5.Boris Worm and Ransom A. Myers, “Meta-Analysis of Cod-Shrimp Interactions Reveals Top-Down Control in Oceanic Food Webs,” Ecology 84, no. 1 (2003): 162–73.
6.Julia K. Baum, Ransom A. Myers, Daniel G. Kehler, Boris Worm, Shelton J. Harley, and Penny A. Doherty, “Collapse and Conservation of Shark Populations in the Northwest Atlantic,” Science 299, no. 5605 (2003): 389–92.
7.Ransom A. Myers and Boris Worm, “Rapid Worldwide Depletion of Predatory Fish Communities,” Nature 423, no. 6937 (2003): 280–83.
8.“Les stocks de grands poissons en danger de disparition,” Le Monde, May 17, 2003.
9.Daniel Pauly, “Obituary: Ransom Aldrich Myers (1952–2007),” Nature 447, no. 7141 (2007): 160.
10.Carl Walters, “Folly and Fantasy in the Analysis of Spatial Catch Rate Data,” Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 60, no. 12 (2003): 1433–36.
11.Pauly, “Obituary: Ransom Aldrich Myers.”
12.Daniel Pauly and Jay Maclean, In a Perfect Ocean: The State of Fisheries and Ecosystems in the North Atlantic Ocean (Washington, DC: Island Press, 2003), 63.
13.Pauly and Maclean, In a Perfect Ocean, 77.
14.Pauly and Maclean, In a Perfect Ocean, 90.
15.Pauly and Maclean, In a Perfect Ocean, 93.
CHINESE FISHERIES AND CHARLES DARWIN
1.Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces, 63.
2.Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces, 63.
3.Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces, 65.
4.Reg Watson and Daniel Pauly, “Systematic Distortions in World Fisheries Catch Trends,” Nature 414, no. 6863 (2001): 534–36.
5.Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces, 90.
6.Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces, 82.
7.Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces, 155.
8.Pauly, 5 Easy Pieces, 89.
9.Daniel Pauly, Villy Christensen, Sylvie Guénette, Tony J. Pitcher, U. Rashid Sumaila, Carl J. Walters, Reg Watson, and Dirk Zeller, “Towards Sustainability in World Fisheries,” Nature 418, no. 6898 (2002): 689–95.
10.Daniel Pauly, Jackie Alder, Elena Bennett, Villy Christensen, Peter Tyedmers, and Reg Watson, “The Future for Fisheries,” Science 302, no. 5649 (2003): 1359–61.
11.Jonathan Weiner, The Beak of the Finch: A Story of Evolution in Our Time (New York: Vintage, 1994).
12.R. B. Freeman and Charles Darwin, Works of Charles Darwin (Norwich, UK: Dawson, 1977).
13.Daniel Pauly, Darwin’s Fishes: An Encyclopedia of Ichthyology, Ecology, and Evolution (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2004), xiv.
UNCERTAIN GLORY
1.Carol Kaesuk Yoon, “Scientist at Work: Daniel Pauly; Iconoclast Looks for Fish and Finds Disaster,” New York Times, January 21, 2003.
2.Ray Hilborn, quoted in Science, April 19, 2002.
3.Charles Darwin, The Autobiography of Charles Darwin 1809–1882, With Original Omissions Restored, ed. Nora Barlow (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1958).
4.Nature, January 2, 2003.
5.G. Bruce Knecht, Hooked: Pirates, Poaching, and the Perfect Fish (Emmaus, PA: Rodale, 2007).
6.Kerri Smith, “Love in the Lab: Close Collaborators,” Nature 510, no. 7506 (2014): 458–60.
7.Christensen and Maclean, Ecosystem Approaches to Fisheries.
RECONSTRUCTIONS
1.Kristin Kaschner, “Modelling and Mapping Resource Overlap Between Marine Mammals and Fisheries on a Global Scale”(doctoral thesis, University of British Columbia, 2004).
2.Peter Yodzis, “Must Top Predators Be Culled for the Sake of Fisheries?” Trends in Ecology & Evolution 16, no. 2 (2001): 78–84.
3.Vasiliki S. Karpouzi, Reg Watson, and Daniel Pauly, “Modelling and Mapping Resource Overlap Between Seabirds and Fisheries on a Global Scale: A Preliminary Assessment,” Marine Ecology Progress Series 343 (2007): 87–99. For an update, see David Grémillet, Aurore Ponchon, Michelle Paleczny, Maria-Lourdes D. Palomares, Vasiliki Karpouzi, and Daniel Pauly, "Persisting Worldwide Seabird-Fishery Competition Despite Seabird Community Decline," Current Biology 28, no. 24 (2018), 4009–13.
4.Daniel Pauly and Dirk Zeller, eds., Global Atlas of Marine Fisheries: A Critical Appraisal of Catches and Ecosystem Impacts (Washington, DC: Island Press, 2016), 6.
5.Pauly and Zeller, Global Atlas of Marine Fisheries, 5.
6.Pauly and Zeller, Global Atlas of Marine Fisheries, 8.
7.Daniel Pauly and Dirk Zeller, “Catch Reconstructions Reveal That Global Marine Fisheries Catches Are Higher Than Reported and Declining,” Nature Communications 7, no. 10244 (2016).
AFRICA FOREVER
1.J. Michael Vakily, Katy Seto, and Daniel Pauly, The Marine Fisheries Environment of Sierra Leone: Belated Proceedings of a National Seminar Held in Freetown, 25–29 November 1991, Fisheries Centre Research Reports 20, no. 4 (2012).
2.Birane Samb and Daniel Pauly, “On ‘Variability’ as a Sampling Artefact: The Case of Sardinella in North-Western Africa,” Fish and Fisheries 1, no. 2 (2000): 206–10.
3.Timothy R. Baumgartner, A. Soutar, and Vicente Ferreira-Bartrina, “Reconstruction of the History of Pacific Sardine and Northern Anchoveta Populations Over the Past Two Millennia From Sediments of the Santa Barbara Basin, California,” CalCOFI Rep 33 (1992): 24–40.
4.André Fontana and Alassane Samba, eds., Artisans de la mer: Une histoire de la pêche maritime sénégalaise (Dakar, Senegal: La Rochette, 2003).
5.Maria Lourdes Palomares and Daniel Pauly, eds., West African Marine Ecosystems: Models and Fisheries Impacts, Fisheries Centre Research Reports 12, no. 7 (2004).
6.For the English edition, see: Michel Beuret, Serge Michel, and Paolo Woods, China Safari: On the Trail of Beijing’s Expansion in Africa, trans. Raymond Valley (New York: Nation Books, 2009).
7.Pauly and Zeller, Global Atlas of Marine Fisheries.
8.Daniel Pauly, Dyhia Belhabib, Roland Blomeyer, William W. Cheung, Andrés M. Cisneros-Montemayor, Duncan Copeland, Sarah Harper et al., “China’s Distant-Water Fisheries in the 21st Century,” Fish and Fisheries 15, no. 3 (2014): 474–88.
9.Daniel Pauly, “Worrying About Whales Instead of Managing Fisheries: A Personal Account of a Meeting in Senegal,” Sea Around Us Project Newsletter 47, no. 1 (2008).
10.Leah R. Gerber, Lyne Morissette, Kristin Kaschner, and Daniel Pauly, “Should Whales Be Culled to Increase Fishery Yield?” Science 323, no. 5916 (2009): 880-81.
11.Christian Chaboud, Massal Fall, Jocelyne Ferraris, André Fontana, Alain Fonteneau, Francis Laloë, Alassane Samba, and Djiga Thiao, “Comment on ‘Fisheries Catch Misreporting and Its Implications: The Case of Senegal,’” Fisheries Research 164 (2015): 322–24.
12.Dyhia Belhabib, Viviane Koutob, Aliou Sall, Vicky W. Y. Lam, Dirk Zeller, and Daniel Pauly, “Counting Pirogues and Missing the Boat: Reply to Chaboud et al.’s Comment on Belhabib et al. ‘Fisheries Catch Misreporting and Its Implications: The Case of Senegal,’” Fisheries Research 164 (2015): 325–28.
FRENCH ALLIES
1.Philippe Cury and Yves Miserey, Une mer sans poissons (Paris: Calmann-Lévy, 2008), 16.
2.Cury and Miserey, Une mer sans poissons, 198.
3.Benoît Mesnil, “Public-Aided Crises in the French Fishing Sector,” Ocean & Coastal Management 51 (2008): 689–700.
4.Gaëlle Dupont, “Il faut pêcher moins si l’on veut continuer à pouvoir pêcher” (We must fish less if we want to continue to be able to fish), Le Monde, March 3, 2009; M. Henry, “Daniel Pauly ne laisse rien filet” (Daniel Pauly lets nothing through the net), Libération, March 14, 2009.
5.Telmo Morato, Reg Watson, Tony J. Pitcher, and Daniel Pauly, “Fishing Down the Deep,” Fish and Fisheries 7, no. 1 (2006): 24–34.
6.Cury and Miserey, Une mer sans poissons, 99.
7.“BLOOM—10 ans,” fr.calameo.com/read/00468861079bc9fd08a76, 44.
8.Claire Nouvian, The Deep: Extraordinary Creatures of the Abyss (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007).
9.“BLOOM—10 ans,” 44.
10.“BLOOM—10 ans,” 45.
11.“BLOOM—10 ans,” 45.
12.“BLOOM—10 ans,” 48.
13.Jennifer Jacquet, Is Shame Necessary?: New Uses for an Old Tool (New York: Vintage, 2016).
14.Philippe Cury and Daniel Pauly, Mange tes méduses! Réconcilier les cycles de la vie et la flèche du temps (Paris: Odile Jacob, 2013). Published in English (with foreword by Paul Ehrlich) as Obstinate Nature (Paris: Odile Jacob, 2021; ebook, hard copy available on request).
15.Jennifer Jacquet and Daniel Pauly, “The Rise of Seafood Awareness Campaigns in an Era of Collapsing Fisheries,” Marine Policy 31, no. 3 (2007): 308–13.
16.Jennifer Jacquet and Daniel Pauly, “Trade Secrets: Renaming and Mislabeling of Seafood,” Marine Policy 32, no. 3 (2008): 309–18.
17.Jennifer Jacquet, Daniel Pauly, David Ainley, Sidney Holt, Paul Dayton, and Jeremy Jackson, “Seafood Stewardship in Crisis,” Nature 467, no. 7311 (2010): 28–29.
18.Cury and Pauly, Mange tes méduses!, 181.
19.Cury and Pauly, Mange tes méduses!, 13.
20.Cury and Pauly, Mange tes méduses!, 17.
21.Cury and Pauly, Mange tes méduses!, 71.
22.Cury and Pauly, Obstinate Nature, chapter 2.
23.Cury and Pauly, Mange tes méduses!, 123.
24.See also: Paul Virilio, Speed and Politics (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2007).
FIRST LOVES, FINAL BATTLES
1.Daniel Pauly, Gasping Fish and Panting Squids: Oxygen, Temperature and the Growth of Water-Breathing Animals (Oldendorf/Luhe, Germany: International Ecology Institute, 2010), 144.
2.William W. Cheung and Yvonne Sadovy, “Retrospective Evaluation of Data-Limited Fisheries: A Case From Hong Kong,” Reviews in Fish Biology and Fisheries 14, no. 2 (2004): 181–206.
3.William W. L. Cheung, Vicky W. Y. Lam, Jorge L. Sarmiento, Kelly Kearney, Reg Watson, and Daniel Pauly, “Projecting Global Marine Biodiversity Impacts Under Climate Change Scenarios,” Fish and Fisheries 10, no. 3 (2009): 235–51.
4.William W. L. Cheung, Vicky W. Y. Lam, Jorge L. Sarmiento, Kelly Kearney, Reg Watson, Dirk Zeller, and Daniel Pauly, “Large-Scale Redistribution of Maximum Fisheries Catch Potential in the Global Ocean Under Climate Change,” Global Change Biology 16, no. 1 (2010): 24–35.
5.William W. L. Cheung, Reg Watson, and Daniel Pauly, “Signature of Ocean Warming in Global Fisheries Catch,” Nature 497, no. 7449 (2013): 365–68.
6.William W. L. Cheung, Jorge L. Sarmiento, John Dunne, Thomas L. Frölicher, Vicky W. Y. Lam, M. L. Deng Palomares, Reg Watson, and Daniel Pauly, “Shrinking of Fishes Exacerbates Impacts of Global Ocean Changes on Marine Ecosystems,” Nature Climate Change 3, no. 3 (2013): 254–58.
7.Sjannie Lefevre, David J. McKenzie, and Göran E. Nilsson, “Models Projecting the Fate of Fish Populations Under Climate Change Need to Be Based on Valid Physiological Mechanisms,” Global Change Biology 23 (2017): 3449–59.
8.Daniel Pauly and William W. L. Cheung, “Sound Physiological Knowledge and Principles in Modeling Shrinking of Fishes Under Climate Change,” Global Change Biology 24, no. 1 (2018): e15–e26.
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