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State of the Great Lakes Ecosystem

Management of Great Lakes fisheries: Progressions and lessons

 

Abstract

Fishery resources include the fishes, the other biota they interact with, and the habitats they occupy. The historical sequences in the use and management of these resources may be considered as a series of interacting sequences of change. These sequences can span from social, economic, institutional and landscape changes, through water quality, habitat supply, and climate changes, to biotic composition changes, introductions and extinctions, and species harvest changes. A selection of these sequences is examined for the St. Lawrence-Great Lakes which has been subjected to intense development and study over the last 200 years. While the whole basin is considered, some detailed attention is given to Lake Ontario and, within it, the Bay of Quinte. Brief selective development histories are given for the three areas as context. The management history is outlined and critiqued. While much progress has been achieved in cleaning up the load-driven problems in the basin, little secure progress toward rehabilitation and sustainability has been achieved. In the current period of economic problems, governments, particularly Canada's, are undoing past ecosystem management progress.

The development of St. Lawrence-Great Lakes' ecosystem science has drawn heavily from both oceanography and limnology. A brief, selective overview of several progressions in ecosystem science illustrates how knowledge and understanding of this ecosystem has expanded over the last 60 years, providing an improved basis for management action. As with use and management, the science of fishery resource management has consisted of many historical progressions. The many sequences in the St. Lawrence-Great Lakes management and science histories lend support for recognition of (i) the importance of taking an ecosystem approach to renewable resource management, (ii) the value of adaptive management practices and, particularly, (iii) the vital complementary roles of long-term monitoring and mathematical modelling.

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Acknowledgements

Thanks to the organizing committee for the “State of Lake Vannern Ecosystem” symposium for the invitation to participate as a keynote. Special thanks to Dr. Gorän Dave for his tireless assistance for my wife and me during our visit to Sweden. Thanks to Mohi Munawar and his staff at AEHMS for his support and encouragement on this project.

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