August 29, 2014 — Despite gloomy predictions of El Niño and the broader impact of climate change on the ocean and planet, California's historic wetfish fisheries carry on — still the foundation of California's fishing economy.
More than 150 years ago, Chinese fishermen rowed Monterey Bay at night in sampans, with baskets of burning fat pine on the bow used as torches to attract market squid, which fishermen harvested with round-haul nets.
This was the modest beginning of California's "wetfish" industry. The immigrant Asian, Italian, Slavic and other nationalities of fishermen who came to America introduced new fishing methods. Around the turn of the 20th century, Sicilian immigrants to Monterey brought their lampara nets, another type of round-haul net, and launched what would become the largest fishery in the western hemisphere — California's famed sardine industry, popularized in our collective conscience by John Steinbeck's "Cannery Row."
It was the plentiful schools of fish — especially sardines that stretch from the Gulf of California to Alaska — that provided opportunity for generations of enterprising fishing families to prosper. The complex of fisheries that makes up California's wetfish industry, including mackerel and anchovy as well as squid and sardines, helped to build the ports of Monterey and San Pedro, as well as San Diego and San Francisco. Wetfish, now called coastal pelagic species (CPS), have contributed the lion's share of California's commercial catch since before the turn of the 20th century.
Read the full opinion piece from the Monterey Herald