June 30, 2016 โ As the federal government prepares to make major decisions about whether or not to expand access to clam and shrimp stocks in Atlantic Canada, a group of marine researchers are urging better tracking and more accountability for one of the countryโs most valuable resources.
The Canadian chapter of international ocean conservation organization Oceana recently completed the most comprehensive public study ever conducted on the state of Canadaโs fish stocks. But, according to Halifax-based marine biologist and report co-author Susanna Fuller, it wasnโt easy.
โIt should not be that hard to find management decisions, whether or not something has a management plan, and the state of a stock, and it is hard right now,โ she said.
Compiling the report often came down to calling individual scientists to get the data required, Fuller said, and some data wasnโt available at all โ they were only able to get information on 125 of the 165 stocks they looked at.
โItโs shocking that in Canada you canโt find anywhere a list of all the fisheries in Canada that is publicly availableโ she said.
โWhen you compare that to the U.S., all that information is online. You can find it, itโs easy, and thereโs an obligation in the U.S. that they actually have to report to Congress on how the fish stocks are doing.โ