Some Asian fish species decimated, study finds
Demand from China could also undermine coral reefs, experts say
![]() Vincent Thain / AP A fisherman shows a life reef fish he caught at Kudat, a fishing village in Malaysia,. Rising demand for live reef fish, mostly from Hong Kong and China, has caused the population of some endangered species to plummet in other parts of Asia, a study found. |
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KUDAT, Malaysia - The rising demand for live reef fish by seafood-hungry diners in China has for the first time been shown to have decimated endangered species around Asia, a study released Wednesday said.
Researchers studying the trade in Malaysia, formerly home to some of Asia's most abundant coastal reefs, found that catches of some grouper species and the Napoleon wrasse fell by as much as 99 percent between 1995 to 2003, a period coinciding with the rapid economic growth of countries where such exotic fish are a delicacy.
"The removal of these large, predatory fish might upset the delicate balance of the coral reef ecosystem," said Helen Scales, who co-authored the study for the Swiss-based World Conservation Union. The study appears in the online edition of Proceedings of The Royal Societies, a respected scientific journal.
"With all the threats the reefs already face, these fishing practices take us one step closer to losing these reefs," Scales said.
The study of daily fish catches and sales quantifies what conservationists have said for a decade — that hunger for live reef fish in Hong Kong, Taiwan and mainland China is causing populations of wrasse, grouper and coral trout on coastal reefs to plummet in Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines and Papua New Guinea.
The United Nations and the World Conservation Union released a report last year warning that human exploitation of the high seas was putting many of its resources on the verge of extinction.
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Vincent Thain / AP Live reef fish just caught in Malaysia await being put in holding containers. |
It also said destructive fishing practices — including bottom trawling, illegal longline fishing and a rise in large industrial vessels — have led to the deaths of tens of thousands of seabirds, turtles and other marine life.
"Well over 60 percent of the marine world and its rich diversity found beyond the limits of national jurisdiction is vulnerable and at increasing risk," Ibrahim Thaiw of the World Conservation Union said in a statement last year.
Cyanide used to stun fish
Reef fish — which are caught mostly by small-scale fishermen who sometimes use cyanide to stun their catch — are prized mostly because they are cooked live. Traders are careful to ensure they arrive that way, packaging them in bags of water and placing them in white coolers for a trip that often takes them thousands of miles to seafood restaurants that resemble aquariums.
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"Most Hong Kong people now choose to eat grouper because of the firm flesh. It's tastier," said Ng Wai Lun, a restaurant owner in Hong Kong, which consumes the most reef fish of any city. "Farmed fish is less tasty and fresh."
Some go closer to the source. Kerry To, a Hong Konger, flew to Malaysia for a holiday to enjoy a meal of steamed grouper in Kota Kinabalu, a few hours away from key reef fishing grounds.
"These fish are so big and taste so good. I'll be telling my friends," said To, 45, tucking into a meal of steamed fish with a dozen other Hong Kong tourists.
The World Wide Fund for Nature's Annadel Cabanban, who studies the trade in Malaysia, agreed with the study's finding that the numbers of reef fish were on the decline due to increasing human demand.
She said destructive fishing practices — namely explosives and the use of cyanide over the past 10 years — were as much to blame for the decline as overfishing because they destroy crucial reef habitats, affecting reproduction.
"There are no predators to check the fish that eat the plants and the shellfish," Cabanban said. "There is a cascading effect on the reef. With so many herbivores, the plant population declines and fish run out of food and they die."
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