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Above and Below the Water: Social/Ecological Transformation in Northwest Newfoundland
Authors:Hamilton  Lawrence C  Haedrich  Richard L  Duncan  Cynthia M
Institution:(1) Sociology Department, University of New Hampshire, Durham, NH, 03824;(2) Memorial University of Newfoundland, USA;(3) The Ford Foundation, USA
Abstract:Marine fisheries and fishing societies develop around the resources provided by a particular ecosystem. As they exploit these resources, fisheries transform the ecosystem, which pushes fishery and society to adapt in turn. This process is illustrated by fisheries, ecological and social data tracking dramatic changes on Newfoundland's Northern Peninsula and its adjacent marine ecosystem, the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence. There a longstanding fishery for cod and other groundfish collapsed in the 1990s, and was replaced by fisheries targeting invertebrates. The new invertebrate fisheries have different socioeconomic characteristics than the former groundfish fisheries. The shift in target species reflects deep ecological changes that were underway at least a decade before official recognition of the crisis. Our analysis of biological data reveals that the main ecological changes occurred during ldquothe glory yearsrdquo of the 1980s, when Newfoundland's domestic fisheries were at their peak. Overfishing and interactions with adverse climatic conditions drove the changes. As the ecosystem transformed, human population declined due to outmigration, and social indicators show signs of distress. Accounts by outport residents paint a generational picture of social change.
Keywords:Newfoundland  fisheries  collapse  social  ecological
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