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万物简史英文版_比尔·布莱森-第73章

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even at a depth of three miles; they found some 3;700 creatures representing almost 200species of organism。 but the dredge could only capture things that were too slow or stupid toget out of the way。 in the late 1960s a marine biologist named john isaacs got the idea tolower a camera with bait attached to it; and found still more; in particular dense swarms ofwrithing hagfish; a primitive eel…like creature; as well as darting shoals of grenadier fish。

where a good food source is suddenly available鈥攆or instance; when a whale dies and sinks tothe bottom鈥攁s many as 390 species of marine creature have been found dining off it。

interestingly; many of these creatures were found to have e from vents up to a thousandmiles distant。 these included such types as mussels and clams; which are hardly known asgreat travelers。 it is now thought that the larvae of certain organisms may drift through thewater until; by some unknown chemical means; they detect that they have arrived at a foodopportunity and fall onto it。

so why; if the seas are so vast; do we so easily overtax them? well; to begin with; theworld鈥檚 seas are not uniformly bounteous。 altogether less than a tenth of the ocean isconsidered naturally productive。 most aquatic species like to be in shallow waters where thereis warmth and light and an abundance of organic matter to prime the food chain。 coral reefs;for instance; constitute well under 1 percent of the ocean鈥檚 space but are home to about 25percent of its fish。

elsewhere; the oceans aren鈥檛 nearly so rich。 take australia。 with over 20;000 miles ofcoastline and almost nine million square miles of territorial waters; it has more sea lapping itsshores than any other country; yet; as tim flannery notes; it doesn鈥檛 even make it into the topfifty among fishing nations。 indeed; australia is a large net importer of seafood。 this isbecause much of australia鈥檚 waters are; like much of australia itself; essentially desert。 (anotable exception is the great barrier reef off queensland; which is sumptuously fecund。)because the soil is poor; it produces little in the way of nutrient…rich runoff。

even where life thrives; it is often extremely sensitive to disturbance。 in the 1970s; fishermenfrom australia and; to a lesser extent; new zealand discovered shoals of a little…known fishliving at a depth of about half a mile on their continental shelves。 they were known as orange1the indigestible parts of giant squid; in particular their beaks; accumulate in sperm whales stomachs into thesubstance known as ambergris; which is used as a fixative in perfumes。 the next time you spray on chanel no。 5(assuming you do); you may wish to reflect that you are dousing yourself in distillate of unseen sea monster。

roughy; they were delicious; and they existed in huge numbers。 in no time at all; fishing fleetswere hauling in forty thousand metric tons of roughy a year。 then marine biologists madesome alarming discoveries。 roughy are extremely long lived and slow maturing。 some maybe 150 years old; any roughy you have eaten may well have been born when victoria wasqueen。 roughy have adopted this exceedingly unhurried lifestyle because the waters they livein are so resource…poor。 in such waters; some fish spawn just once in a lifetime。 clearly theseare populations that cannot stand a great deal of disturbance。 unfortunately; by the time thiswas realized the stocks had been severely depleted。 even with careful management it will bedecades before the populations recover; if they ever do。

elsewhere; however; the misuse of the oceans has been more wanton than inadvertent。

many fishermen 鈥渇in鈥潯harks鈥攖hat is; slice their fins off; then dump them back into the waterto die。 in 1998; shark fins sold in the far east for over 250 a pound。 a bowl of shark finsoup retailed in tokyo for 100。 the world wildlife fund estimated in 1994 that the numberof sharks killed each year was between 40 million and 70 million。

as of 1995; some 37;000 industrial…sized fishing ships; plus about a million smaller boats;were between them taking twice as many fish from the sea as they had just twenty…five yearsearlier。 trawlers are sometimes now as big as cruise ships and haul behind them nets bigenough to hold a dozen jumbo jets。 some even use spotter planes to locate shoals of fish fromthe air。

it is estimated that about a quarter of every fishing net hauled up contains 鈥渂y…catch鈥濃攆ishthat can鈥檛 be landed because they are too small or of the wrong type or caught in the wrongseason。 as one observer told the economist: 鈥渨e鈥檙e still in the dark ages。 we just drop a netdown and see what es up。鈥潯erhaps as much as twenty…two million metric tons of suchunwanted fish are dumped back in the sea each year; mostly in the form of corpses。 for everypound of shrimp harvested; about four pounds of fish and other marine creatures aredestroyed。

large areas of the north sea floor are dragged clean by beam trawlers as many as seventimes a year; a degree of disturbance that no ecosystem can withstand。 at least two…thirds ofspecies in the north sea; by many estimates; are being overfished。 across the atlantic thingsare no better。 halibut once abounded in such numbers off new england that individual boatscould land twenty thousand pounds of it in a day。 now halibut is all but extinct off thenortheast coast of north america。

nothing; however; pares with the fate of cod。 in the late fifteenth century; the explorerjohn cabot found cod in incredible numbers on the eastern banks of north america鈥攕hallowareas of water popular with bottom…feeding fish like cod。 some of these banks were vast。

georges banks off massachusetts is bigger than the state it abuts。 the grand banks offnewfoundland is bigger still and for centuries was always dense with cod。 they were thoughtto be inexhaustible。 of course they were anything but。

by 1960; the number of spawning cod in the north atlantic had fallen to an estimated 1。6million metric tons。 by 1990 this had sunk to 22;000 metric tons。 in mercial terms; thecod were extinct。 鈥渇ishermen;鈥潯rote mark kurlansky in his fascinating history; cod; 鈥渉adcaught them all。鈥潯he cod may have lost the western atlantic forever。 in 1992; cod fishingwas stopped altogether on the grand banks; but as of last autumn; according to a report innature; stocks had not staged a eback。 kurlansky notes that the fish of fish fillets and fish sticks was originally cod; but then was replaced by haddock; then by redfish; and lately bypacific pollock。 these days; he notes drily; 鈥渇ish鈥潯s 鈥渨hatever is left。鈥

much the same can be said of many other seafoods。 in the new england fisheries offrhode island; it was once routine to haul in lobsters weighing twenty pounds。 sometimes theyreached thirty pounds。 left unmolested; lobsters can live for decades鈥攁s much as seventyyears; it is thought鈥攁nd they never stop growing。 nowadays few lobsters weigh more thantwo pounds on capture。 鈥渂iologists;鈥潯ccording to the new york times; 鈥渆stimate that 90percent of lobsters are caught within a year after they reach the legal minimum size at aboutage six。鈥潯espite declining catches; new england fishermen continue to receive state andfederal tax incentives that encourage them鈥攊n some cases all but pel them鈥攖o acquirebigger boats and to harvest the seas more intensively。 today fishermen of massachusetts arereduced to fishing the hideous hagfish; for which there is a slight market in the far east; buteven their numbers are now falling。

we are remarkably ignorant of the dynamics that rule life in the sea。 while marine life ispoorer than it ought to be in areas that have been overfished; in some naturally impoverishedwaters there is far more life than there ought to be。 the southern oceans around antarcticaproduce only about 3 percent of the world鈥檚 phytoplankton鈥攆ar too little; it would seem; tosupport a plex ecosystem; and yet it does。 crab…eater seals are not a species of animal thatmost of us have heard of; but they may actually be the second most numerous large species ofanimal on earth; after humans。 as many as fifteen million of them may live on the pack icearound antarctica。 there are also perhaps two million weddel sea
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