The Albatross and the Fish
336 pages, 6 x 9
13 color photos, 15 b&w photos, 4 b&w maps, 2 charts-graphs
Hardcover
Release Date:01 Nov 2011
ISBN:9780292726826
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The Albatross and the Fish

Linked Lives in the Open Seas

University of Texas Press

Breeding on remote ocean islands and spending much of its life foraging for food across vast stretches of seemingly empty seas, the albatross remains a legend for most people. And yet, humans are threatening the albatross family to such an extent that it is currently the most threatened bird group in the world. In this extensively researched, highly readable book, Robin W. Doughty and Virginia Carmichael tell the story of a potentially catastrophic extinction that has been interrupted by an unlikely alliance of governments, conservation groups, and fishermen.

Doughty and Carmichael authoritatively establish that the albatross's fate is linked to the fate of two of the highest-value table fish, Bluefin Tuna and Patagonian Toothfish, which are threatened by unregulated commercial harvesting. The authors tell us that commercial fishing techniques are annually killing tens of thousands of albatrosses. And the authors explain how the breeding biology of albatrosses makes them unable to replenish their numbers at the rate they are being depleted. Doughty and Carmichael set the albatross's fate in the larger context of threats facing the ocean commons, ranging from industrial overfishing to our habit of dumping chemicals, solid waste, and plastic trash into the open seas. They also highlight the efforts of dedicated individuals, environmental groups, fishery management bodies, and governments who are working for seabird and fish conservation and demonstrate that these efforts can lead to sustainable solutions for the iconic seabirds and the entire ocean ecosystem.

Robin W. Doughty is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Geography and the Environment at the University of Texas at Austin. He has authored nine books, whose subjects range from the fad for wild bird millinery that sparked the Audubon Society to the recovery of the whooping crane and the impact of settlers on wildlife populations in both North America and Australia.

Virginia Carmichael's previous book was Framing History: The Rosenberg Story and the Cold War. She taught postcolonial studies as an associate professor at the University of Montana and served as a senior managing auditor at the Texas State Auditor’s Office, where she specialized in public and higher education.

  • Foreword by H.R.H. Prince of Wales
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction by John Croxall
  • Milestones: Albatross Encounters and Concerns
  • Chapter One. Storytelling
  • Part I: The Albatross
    • Chapter Two. Plunder
    • Chapter Three. Science
    • Chapter Four. Connections
    • Chapter Five. Home
    • Chapter Six. Family
  • Part II: Crossings
    • Chapter Seven. Migration
    • Chapter Eight. Globalization
    • Chapter Nine. Commons
  • Part III: Birds and Fish
    • Chapter Ten. Fish
    • Chapter Eleven. Management
    • Chapter Twelve. Crisis
    • Chapter Thirteen. Bycatch
  • Part IV: Sea Change
    • Chapter Fourteen. Links
    • Chapter Fifteen. Engineering
    • Chapter Sixteen. Turning Point
  • Part V: Agents of Change
    • Chapter Seventeen. Fishers
    • Chapter Eighteen. Governments
    • Chapter Nineteen. Nongovernmentals
    • Chapter Twenty. Trade
    • Chapter Twenty-one. Celebrities
    • Chapter Twenty-two. Capstone
  • Conclusion. Hope
  • Appendix: CCAMLR and Seabird Mortality
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
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