NEED FOR PROTECTION OF CREATURES THAT LIVE IN THE WATER
Perhaps you think it is absurd to
talk about caring for the creatures that live in the
water, since they can so easily hide away in its depths
where we cannot follow. Perhaps you think that
because the ocean is so great it would be impossible
ever to catch all the fish that live in it. It
is easy to understand how all the fish might be caught
out of the creeks, rivers, and shallow lakes, since
fish are hungry and we put before them such attractive
bait; but with the ocean it seems different.
It stretches so many thousands of miles and is so very
deep that there does not appear to be any danger of
exterminating the animals of the ocean as we have
some of those of the land.
Is it true, however, that all the
vast waters of the ocean are full of fish, or are
they found only in certain parts? The fishermen
can tell us about this matter. They know where
to set the hooks and nets, and where they are most
likely to get a good catch. They do not go far
out where the water is deep but seek, instead, the
shallow waters near the shore or about the reefs and
islands. They know that the deep water of the
ocean contains very few fish and none that are of any
value as food.
Each kind of fish has become adapted
to certain parts of the ocean, for both the food supply
and the pressure of the water differ with different
depths. Fish caught in deep water are often dead
before reaching the surface, because of the decrease
in the water pressure.
One reason why fish are not numerous
far out in the ocean is because there is little food
to be had there. The reason no fish are found
in the very deep parts of the ocean is because the
water there contains no air particles. Strange
as it may seem, although fish breathe water, they
cannot live unless it contains oxygen from the air.
The fish, then, that interest us because
of their value for food, are found only in the shallow
waters usually near the shore and in the lakes and
rivers. Because of this fact it is possible, as
we have learned from experience, to set so many traps
and use so many nets and hooks as entirely to destroy
certain species.
The fish have their natural enemies,
and there is warfare among them just as there is among
the land animals. The larger and more powerful
live upon the smaller ones, but, seemingly to make
up for this, Nature has given the small fish quickness
of movement which the large fish do not
possess to aid them in escaping. They
have also the power of increasing very rapidly.
The little herring, which is the chief food of many
of the large fish, maintains its countless numbers
against all its enemies except the fishermen.
The Indians, with their crude traps,
hooks, and spears, could obtain but few fish at a
time and did not reduce their numbers. But civilized
man, with his cunningly contrived hooks and nets,
has the same advantage over the fish that the hunter,
with his repeating gun, has over the land animals.
Nature, not foreseeing how destructive man would be,
has armed neither the creatures of the land nor the
creatures of the water against him.
The fisherman does his work just as
thoughtlessly as the hunter whose business it is to
supply the market. He seems to think no more about
the effect upon next season’s supply, of his
stretching a net across a river and catching all the
fish going up to spawn, than does the market hunter
who would, if he could, shoot the last duck. Is
it not strange that many fishermen will do anything
in their power to evade the laws governing the catching
of fish when by doing so they injure their own business?
We have already nearly destroyed the
mammals that live in the ocean. Among them are
the whales, which were once numerous in the arctic
regions. Few whaling ships now arrive with profitable
cargoes of oil or whalebone. The sea otter, the
fur of which is more highly prized than that of any
other animal, and the walrus, valuable for its oil,
are also nearly extinct.
No more cruel hunting was ever carried
on than was that of the seal mothers in the open ocean
where they go in search of food. When the mothers
are killed the young ones, left in the rookeries
upon the Pribilof Islands, soon die of starvation.
The fur seal has thus been so reduced in numbers that
it was threatened with extinction. Now Russia,
Japan, England, and the United States have agreed to
stop all killing of the fur seal for a number of years.
As a result of the great demand for
fish, and the careless methods used by the thousands
of men engaged in catching them, Nature unaided cannot
keep up the supply. For the purpose of assisting
her, strict laws have been passed in many states.
These laws prohibit fishermen from stretching their
nets or weirs across the streams so as to block the
passage of the fish when going to their spawning grounds.
They also prohibit the taking of undersized fish and
in some cases allow none at all of some kinds to be
taken for a given time. Our government is now
doing a great deal to save the food fishes of the country,
but some varieties are still decreasing.
The little herring is the most valuable
of all the sea fish. Enormous numbers are captured
in nets, and still greater numbers form the food of
other fish. The herring has so many enemies that
it must increase rapidly in order to hold its place
in the sea. Nature has arranged that this fish
should produce twenty thousand or more eggs at each
spawning season. It is thought that if only two
eggs out of this great number hatch and grow up, the
supply of herring will be maintained. This estimate
does not, however, take into account the present terrible
waste of herring in the Chesapeake and other bays
on the Atlantic coast, where it is taken in nets and
used for making land fertilizer. Is it any wonder
that the herring is now decreasing in numbers?
The oyster was once hunted so closely
that it would have disappeared from our coast waters
if the young had not been taken and raised artificially.
Is it not interesting to know that we plant young oysters
on oyster farms, and raise oyster crops, all below
the level of high tide? The greatest oyster farms
in the world are upon Chesapeake Bay. There are
also oyster farms in other bays upon the Atlantic seaboard,
and lately the oyster has been transplanted to the
bays upon the Pacific Coast.
The lobster was trapped so industriously
that it also began to grow scarce. Finally the
government took up the matter of protecting it.
The eggs and the young were guarded, and now it is
increasing in numbers.
Once the sturgeon was very plentiful
in the lakes and rivers of our country. For a
long time it was thought to be of no value and was
thrown away when caught in nets set for other fish.
Then it was discovered that its flesh was delicious,
and its eggs, known as caviar, became a very
fashionable dish. After this there followed a
period of most destructive fishing, and now sturgeon
are quite scarce and high priced.
Herring, shad, and salmon are migratory
fish. By this we mean that they spend a part
of their lives in the ocean but enter the bays and
streams at the spawning season. You can readily
understand that if the bays are blocked with nets
the fish cannot reach the spawning grounds and their
numbers must decrease. Chesapeake Bay contains
such a maze of nets, many of them extending out ten
miles from the shore, that it is a wonder that any
fish get past them.
The waters of New England were once
filled with striped bass, smelt, salmon, and shad,
but now these fish are almost gone. The shad are
rapidly decreasing all along the Atlantic Coast.
The nets in Lake Erie extend out sometimes ten miles
from shore, and the whitefish as well as the sturgeon
have been greatly reduced in numbers there.
When the Pacific Coast was first settled,
the “salmon run” in the Sacramento, Columbia,
and other rivers was a wonderful sight. The waters
were fairly alive with these huge fish. Hydraulic
mining so muddied the waters of the Sacramento that
their numbers greatly decreased. Then came the
fishermen and stretched their nets across the rivers,
so nearly blocking the channels that the salmon were
rarely seen on their old spawning grounds. Now
salmon fishing is carefully regulated and salmon are
increasing.
The shallow waters of San Francisco
Bay, the ocean for some miles out from shore, and
the waters about the islands of Southern California
form very valuable fishing grounds, which, if they
are taken care of, will furnish much larger supplies
of fish than are now obtained.
The interesting discovery has been
made that the waters around the islands of Santa Catalina
and San Clemente form important spawning grounds for
many food fish, including the great tuna. These
waters were fished so destructively that many of the
fish were found to be decreasing. This has led
to the establishment of a fish preserve for three
miles about Santa Catalina Island. Within this
area no fish are allowed to be taken except with a
hook and line. Some of the most valuable fish,
which were almost gone, are now becoming more numerous.
The fact that the fish stay close about the island
where the water is shallow makes the establishment
of the preserve possible.
The salmon and halibut fisheries of
the Alaskan waters have long been the source of much
profit. This region, owing to the many bays and
islands, fairly swarms with fish of many kinds.
Protection will soon be needed here if this great
storehouse of fish is to be kept filled.
The cod fisheries of the Newfoundland
banks are among the most valuable in the world, and
are almost the only ones where fishing has long been
carried on and where the supply is not decreasing.
The “banks” are formed by a great flat
reef four hundred miles long, over which the water
is shallow enough to offer a fine home for cod.
Hatcheries have been established in
many parts of our country for the purpose of collecting
and hatching fish eggs. These are used for restocking
those waters that have been fished out. After
the eggs have hatched and the young fish have reached
a certain stage, they are shipped to the streams where
they are needed. The United States fishery on
the McCloud River, California, has distributed rainbow
trout all over the United States. Shad and striped
bass have been brought from Eastern fisheries and
planted in Pacific Coast waters, where they are now
rapidly increasing.
Thus we learn that valuable food fish
live within certain narrow bounds instead of being
distributed all through the waters of the globe.
It is as easy, with our many ingenious devices of
net and weir, to destroy the inhabitants of the water
as it is to destroy those of the land with guns.