Kalkbreath":3sxr9xj1 said:Then dispute the data.....Peter, How many pounds of fish do Filipinos eat each year. And where do those fish come from? More importantly where did those fish come from in the 1960 and 70s? When there were almost zero aquaculture and zero imports? You know , the same time the reefs disappeared? On this board you claimed that cyanide food fishermen dont use more tablets in their squirt bottles then hobby collectors ......but in your testimony you claimed otherwise. If there are fifty times more fish collected by live seafood collectors each day and each food fish is collected with a higher cyanide dose , Then that supports my idea that live food fish collection so far out paces ornamental collection that it would be impossible to even notice any MO damage.{kinda like peeing in the rain} And more importantly, that during the time when 75% of the reefs in PI disappeared......cyanide and blast fishing out paced MO collection 5000 to one . Yet you have spent the last ten years preaching the opposite. Why?
PeterIMA":yhz8aikw said:Kalk, Everything in your last posting is a deliberate lie.
Peter
So then I am correct! How many pounds does 41 kilograms convert to? And how many pounds of fish per kilometer square would that be? Well, one third of the fish for export come from the municipal reefs area http://www.fao.org/fi/fcp/en/PHL/profile.htm That means because the only free fish are from the reefs not from commercial collectors .....that most Philippinos collected their own fish back in the 1960s. And At least one third of five TRILLION pounds came from the reefs. The ocean’s resources alone provide the world with more protein than beef, chicken, or pork (Dayton, 1995). This is especially true for the Philippines where fish accounts for more than 50% of protein intake (Hunt, 1996).50% of the families are below the poverty line, fishing the Lingayen Gulf serves as the only means of survival (Paw, 1991). The lack of alternative livelihood has forced many to move to the coastal areas. As the number of fishers increases, the catch per unit effort decreases. This has led many Filipino fishers to use destructive fishing methods, such as cyanide poisoning, fish blasting, and trawlers. Trawlers are used by most commercial fisheries because of the large yields they produce. . The poor economy and lack of alternative livelihood has led many Filipinos to resort to fishing. The increasing population puts a demand on the natural resources, and environmental problems develop. According to Dayton (1995), "fishing typically does not require land ownership and because it remains, in general, open to all, it is often the employer of last resort in the developing world- an occupation when there are no other options." "Overall, the fishfolk population has been increasing since the 1950’s resulting in very high fisherman and boat density. The gulf is currently experiencing biological overfishing due to excessive fishing efforts which have been noted in the mid 1970s" (Paw, 1991).PeterIMA":sn67gv0i said:The per capita consumption of fish in PI was 41 kg/year in 1984. Fish are caught almost everywhere, many come from areas where there are no coral reefs. I don't have a breakdown on what proportion of the landings are coral reef related. I will look at BFAR reports to see whether I can find it. Tuna is a significant part of the fishery. Tuna are caught in the Sulu Sea in the SW PI and off of southern and SW Mindanao. You claim there was no aquaculture in the 1960s and 1970s. This is false. There always was a lot of aquaculture for species like milkfish even then. The study by Gomez conducted in the late 1970s did indicate significant reef degredation. Gomez et al. (1981) found that out of 559 stations surveyed, the results were 31.8% poor, 38.8% fair, 23.7% good, and 5.7% excellent. In my paper published in 1988 (in Environmental Biology of Fishes) I discussed all aspects of destructive fishing including blast fishing, muro-ami, kayakas fishing, illegal trawling (baby trawls) inshore, and cyanide fishing (by both the MO collectors and food fishermen). So, I never claimed that this was all due to cyanide, or that the food fishery was more destructive in terms of cyanide use than the MO fishery.
BUT what is known is how many fish are being extracted, thus we can compare fish to fish collection, If one third of 4 trillion pounds is being collected from the reefs for self use fish consumption. And most of that is with blast fishing and cyanide......then a fair comparison would be 1.5 trillion pounds to our hobbys 700,000 tiny reef fish. How many pounds do 700,000 damsels and clownfish weigh?Peter":sn67gv0i said:In my Cyanide-free Net-caught paper I stated that MO fishermen generally use 1-2 cyanide tablets and that food fishermen geerally use 3-5 cyanide tablets in squirt bottles. I also stated that it was believed there were about 4,000 MO fish collectors. It is not known how many food fishermen there are in PI.
But What does your TEN food fishing boats represent? Do you think ten boats collect 1.5 trillion pounds of fish? You are staying away from comparing fish to fish and using per boat examples. Why did you not mention the little issue of there being sightly more then ten boats fishing the waters of PI yet you listed all 4000 MO collectors?peter":sn67gv0i said:A study by Robinson (1986) (the BFAR memo) found that 10 vessels used cyanide to capture food fish (mostly groupers) off the Island of Palawan. Each vessel was estimated to use 1250 kg of cyanide every two weeks. Hence, 4000 aquarium-fish collectors (Anonymous 1998) may use as much as 300,000 kg of sodium cyanide per year, while ten food fishing vessels fishing 35 weeks per year would use 218,750 kg. Hence, the total amount of sodium cyanide presently used in the Philippines might exceed 500,000 kg per year.
You forgot 1999 and more importantly 2000 and that food fish collection with cyanide did not decrease nearly as much as MOpeter":sn67gv0i said:However, the latter estimate does not compensate for the decline in cyanide usage in recent years, indicted by cyanide testing indicated later in the paper by Rubec et al. (2001). The trend presented indicated that the % of MO fish with cyanide present had declined from 43% in 1996, to 41% in 1997, to 18% in 1998.
Fish collection for food did not decrease even after the blastfishing ban .......just because Steve thinks the Philippinos did not use cyanide for food collection prior to 1975 does not mean it was not occurring. It was not until the late seventies that a market for live food fish began to increase. But if you think starving Natives did not understand the ability for cyanide to collect a lot of fish quickly after watching MO collectors use it .....your dreaming. {And Mr Robert Goldstein offered more then enough evidence that cyanide fishing for self use began long before live food fish exporters started using it.Peter":sn67gv0i said:Without knowing how many food fishermen are using cyanide or what species are targeted with cyanide it is not correct to assume that the food fishermen use more cyanide than the MO collectors.
At the time that the reefs were declining (lets say the late 1960s and during the 1970s blast fishing and MO cyanide fishing was occurring. There was no fishery using cyanide for food fish in PI prior to 1975 (Robinson memo). Hence, your assumption that the destruction was due to cyanide food fishing is false.There is a better case for ascribing it to blast fishing and MO collectors using cyanide (as I discussed in my 1988 paper). So your last statement about food fishing with cyanide being 5000 times higher than MO collection using cyanide in the early 1970s is totally false.
NO it assumes that both industries used cyanide at the rates YOUR data showed . Did your data not show that food fish contained a higher cyanide rate? And Actually I am only using the live food fish export data for this 50 to one ratio.{not including the thrillions of punds of cyanide collelcted self use food fish........ As a man who has been speaking on the issue for twenty years ......just how many live fish were collected for food in the 1970s through present? How many live food fish compared to MO fish ? FIFTY TO ONEPeter":sn67gv0i said:Your assumption (not backed with data) is that there is 50 times more food fish caught that MO fish (presumably on a total weight basis). This may be true, but it falsely assumes that all of the food fishes were caught with cyanide.
Hey Steve , remember when you wrote in your book that 80% of cyanide fish die along the route from collection to retailer?cortez marine":2ev3bevu said:Agreed Mike,
The credibility of the 'witness' has been proven to be very low indeed.
In any proper venue he would be dismissed as incompetent testimony.
Only in Monty Pythons argument clinic skit is such behavior acceptable...as humor.
The damage is that it drains, diverts. waters down and hijacks better posts and more useful concerns.
Hes lucky this ain't Survivor.
We'd just vote him off the island.
Steve
As soon as I am done with Peter, I take up the 5% cyanide issue with you. :wink:Peter testimony":2ev3bevu said:A large proportion (perhaps more than 80%) of the stunned fish, that survive the initial
exposure to cyanide, die later throughout the chain from reef to retailer (Rubec 1986, Appendix 1).
The live reef fish trade in Southeast Asia has an estimated annual retail value of $1.2 billion (U.S. dollars), $1 billion of which consists of exports of food fish (mostly to Hong Kong) and $200 million of which consists of exports of aquarium fish to Europe and North America.
Estimates by Lau and Parry-Jones (1999) reveal in 1997, "Hong Kong alone imported nearly 32,000 metric tons of live reef fish" Thats 70,000,000. SEVENTY MILLION POUNDS! Few reliable statistics exist for the total value or volume of the live reef fish food market, partly because cyanide fishing is illegal and therefore the market is inherently not transparent. That means Just Hong Kong alone imports 35 million two pound fish . And 80% are cyanide collected , so 29 million cyanide fish compared to our MO and its 29% of 4 million fish [ which means using your numbers that one million MO cyanide fish ........thats 29Hong Kong to one MO fish {just using Hong Kong}. Add the local consumption of cyanide fish which could range from your ten percent of fifty billion {5 billion pounds } or MY contention that sixty percent of fifty billion self consumption ......[thats 70,million people times 70 pounds = 50 billion pounds] so sixty percent of that is 30 billion pounds. And what you have is more then enough proof that cyanide food fish collection is so huge that to compare our industry and the cyanide food fish industry as you testified to ...as "50% to 50% is ******* Try five billion to one using your numbers{ ten percent of local diet =five billion pounds....and 1 million MO cyanide fish. Oh! but thats assuming that we collect one pound damsels :lol:A board the Morning Sun in the grey Hong Kong dawn just before Christmas 1997, a stocky Chinese stevedore stood waist-deep in a tank with dozens of furiously thrashing napoleon wrasse, one of the most spectacular of Asia's coral reef fishes. One by one, he wrestled the fish, some weighing nearly 30 kg. into a scoop net and into the hands of his co-workers on the dock above. Weighed and sold right on the dock for as much as $90 per kilogram, the fish were hustled off in minutes into waiting trucks equipped with their own holding tanks. By evening, some of them would be sold to elite Hong Kong diners willing to pay up to $180 per kilogram - and up to $225 per plate for the wrasse's lips, the most prized of reef fish delicacies.
By the time the Morning Sun had unloaded, some 20 tons of live reef fish - 8 tons of napoleon wrasse and 12 tons of assorted grouper species - were on their way to the districts where diners pick their fish from tanks at specialized shops for cooking in adjacent restaurants. The Morning Sun's catch, which came from Indonesian waters, was just a drop in the bucket, however: Some 20,000 tons of live reef food fish were imported into Hong Kong in 1997.(1) The scene that December morning was just one link in a chain of poison and profits that is bringing destruction to some of the planet's most pristine and biologically diverse coral reefs: The fish on the Morning Sun were almost certainly captured by applying hundreds of kilograms of cyanide, the most lethal broad-spectrum poison known to science, across vast areas of Indonesia's coral reefs.[1998, by Charles Victor Barber, Pratt. Vaughan R.]
But that does not include the unreported self use food fish collection.especialy in the 1960 and 1970s. Do you really think every time a family member goes out to fish they run down to the fisheries office and report thier daily catch?PeterIMA":1jsrbmqr said:Kalk, As far as your second to last posting most of this information is provided in the paper I wrote titled The Need For Conservation and Management of Philippine Coral Reefs published in the scientific journal Environmental Biology of Fishes. In my last posting I stated that 909,000 tons landed in PI came from the municipal (small scale) fishery.
I will use A quote from a great manpeter":1jsrbmqr said:It is encouraging to see that you quoted the IMA publications (Barber and Pratt 1997) so extensively.
I think you are missing my point. The cyanide testing data (done by IMA for BFAR) on food fishes was confined to testing conducted in the Philippines. So, the claims you make about food fishes being caught 80% with cyanide are unsubstantiated elsewhere.
See , when it serves you to paint Indonesia as a cyanide using Nation compariable to PI you do so. But when the idea that Indo uses cyanide works against your position ....you imply that testing is the only way to Know for sure.Reagan":1jsrbmqr said:Oh , there you go again "
what did your data state? it was 65% in the early ninties?Then use 65% ! My numbers will only change 20% I used 80% for Hong Kong live food fish trade . And can back it up with quite a few other opinions other then mine. The type of fish Hong Kong imports are more geared to deep reef hiding fish and many if not most of the live food fish are transported directly by boat to HK.... thus by passing the exporting accountibility of Gov fisheries.peter":1jsrbmqr said:In my CDT paper published in Marine Ornamental Species Collection Culture and Cultivation I gave some data on the % of various species of groupers that were positive for cyanide. This was based on the Philippines sampling and testing done by the IMA.
What hasnt been published? Its all out there......only no one wants let loose of their own agendas. Even if only ten percent of the fish Philippinos eat is cyanide collected ..thats five billion pounds ..and the fact that the reefs declined at a time when Their SELF use blast fishing and cyanide fishing were the only stressors on the reefs in 1960, 70........then there is only ONE answer isnt there? If not then why during those twenty years?peter":1jsrbmqr said:Basically, I am saying the data to support your claims have not yet been published (although anecdotal information confirms the widespread use of cyanide in countries like Indonesia).