Marine Ecologist Surprised To Find “Critically Endangered” Giant Sea Bass Thriving in Mexican Waters

Giant Sea Bass

Giant Sea Bass

I was looking at the seafloor, focused on identifying fish species as I normally did when diving off of the California coast, when suddenly I felt something large above me. When I turned my head I saw a giant fish – more than 6 feet (2 meters) long – calmly interested in the air bubbles coming from my SCUBA regulator. This was 2016 and was my first encounter with a giant sea bass.

I am a marine ecologist, and I study how international borders pose challenges for conservation and management efforts in the marine environment. Although there are no walls or fences in the ocean, borders still act as stark barriers for a variety of things.

Giant sea bass live off the west coast of North America in both Mexican and U.S. waters. I have found that large differences in regulation and research efforts between the two countries have led to a significant misunderstanding of giant sea bass population health.

Giant Sea Bass Map

Giant sea bass live in coastal waters from northern California all the way south to the Sea of Cortez. Credit: Arturo Ramiréz-Valdez, CC BY-ND

Different countries, different science

The giant sea bass is the largest coastal bony fish in the Northeastern Pacific. It can grow up to 9 feet (2.7 meters) long and weigh up to 700 pounds (315 kg). It lives in coastal waters from northern California to the tip of the Baja California peninsula in Mexico, including the entire Gulf of California.

In California, commercial fishing for the species began in the late 1880s. Large fish used to be very abundant across the entire range, but the fishery collapsed in the early 1970s. As a response, in 1981 the U.S. banned both commercial and recreational fishing for giant sea bass, and there are many ongoing research and population recovery efforts today.

Giant Sea Bass Fish

Giant sea bass are listed as a critically endangered species. Credit: Maru Brito, CC BY-ND

The collapse and subsequent protection and flurry of research in the U.S. stand in stark contrast to Mexico. In Mexico, there are minimal regulations on fishing for the species, and there is almost a complete lack of data and research on it – there are only three studies on giant sea bass with any data from Mexico.

The International Union for Conservation of Nature considers giant sea bass to be a critically endangered species due to the population being “severely fragmented, leading to a continuing decline of mature individuals.” But this decision was based on a report that had no data whatsoever from Mexico. This lack of data is concerning, considering 73% of the species’ range is in Mexican waters.

This knowledge gap made me wonder if ecologists had the wrong idea about the health of giant sea bass populations.

Giant Sea Bass Baja

Giant sea bass are a common sight at fish markets throughout Baja. Credit: Proyecto Mero Gigante, CC BY-ND

Healthy fish in Mexico

In 2017, I led an effort to document the giant sea bass population in Mexico and look for clues to what it was in the past. At the beginning of the project, my colleagues and I feared that the records in Mexico would confirm the precarious situation of the fish in the U.S. But the reality turned out to be the opposite.

Commercial Fishers Giant Sea Bass

Commercial fishers don’t often target giant sea bass, but catch them as bycatch when fishing for other species. Credit: Proyecto Mero Gigante, CC BY-ND

To our surprise, we found giant sea bass everywhere in the fish markets and fishing grounds from our very first assessments. The fishmongers were never out of the fish; instead, they would ask us, “How many kilos do you need?” It was clear that for fishers in Mexico, the species is still common in the sea, and therefore, in their nets. It is still possible to find big fish up to 450 pounds 200 kilograms, and the average catch was around 26 pounds (12 kilograms).

It was fantastic to see an abundance of these fish in markets, but I also wanted to understand the fishery trends through history and how current fishing levels compared to previous years. I looked at historical and contemporary fishing records and found that the Mexican commercial fleet has caught an average of 55 tons per year over the past 60 years, and the fishery has been relatively stable over the past 20 years, with a peak in 2015 at 112 tons.

According to U.S. and Mexican records, the largest yearly catch ever recorded for giant sea bass in Mexico was 386 tons in 1933. Biologists consider a fishery to have collapsed when total catches, under the same effort, are less than 10% of the largest catches on record. So a steady trend of 55 tons per year shows that the fishery in Mexico has not collapsed. It is clear that giant sea bass populations have faced severe declines throughout their range; however, the health of the species is not as dire as thought.

Another interesting finding from my research is that the apparent collapse of the giant sea bass fishery documented in the 1970s actually began as early as 1932.

Over the first half of the 20th century, as the U.S. commercial fleet overfished U.S. waters, they began fishing in Mexican waters too – but they continued to count all catches as from the U.S. This changed in 1968 when the two governments signed the Mexico–U.S. Fisheries Agreement, limiting how much fish each country’s fleet could take from the other country’s waters. The collapse of the U.S. fishery in the 1970s was not due to a drastic reduction in fish numbers in Mexican waters, but driven by changes in fishing regulation between the U.S. and Mexico. The California fish populations had been depressed for decades, but this was hidden by fish from Mexico.

Better data, better management

Based on my research, I believe that the giant sea bass may not qualify as a critically endangered species. My analysis of modern catch data suggests that the population of this iconic fish is likely much larger than biologists previously thought, especially in Mexico.

Giant Sea Bass Populations in Mexico

Giant sea bass populations in Mexico have declined, but are still much healthier than researchers thought. Credit: Meru Brito, CC BY-ND

I am leading the next assessment for the International Union for Conservation of Nature, and now that we have accumulated better data, we can make a more informed decision that balances responsible management of the species with human needs.

I hope that our study inspires policymakers in the U.S. and Baja to start a conversation about how to manage this incredible fish in a collaborative way. But I feel our work also has larger implications. It shows how asymmetry in research and data can create significant barriers to understanding the past and present status of a species like the giant sea bass and make it harder to implement sustainable practices for the future.

Written by Arturo Ramírez-Valdez, Researcher, University of California San Diego.

This article was first published in The Conversation.The Conversation

5 Comments on "Marine Ecologist Surprised To Find “Critically Endangered” Giant Sea Bass Thriving in Mexican Waters"

  1. My Dad pulled one of those monsters up in 1969 off of Puerto Penasco. 312 kilo’s. Not bad right. You egg heads are always in the dark. Get out and enjoy life instead of sitting around pissing and moaning. We humans do not need constant reminders that we are burning our home world while we dance around the flames.

  2. All of you suck that poor fish they’re supposed to be critically endangered correct. Yet these people are killing them and eating them and that supposed ecologist has one slapped right in front of them. It’s disgusting it should be illegal to fish those or keep any of them. This is why all life is going to disappear from the Earth I hate you people!

    • I agree! That poor Fish, especially being the size it is, would have suffered terribly! Just like Tuna, etc. All of Earths Creatures Suffer as we would!

    • 1. The point of the article (which you seem to have missed) is that the species is healthy and plentiful, despite being listed as “critically endangered” because of bad science.

      2. That fish is in a fish market. I doubt the ecologist had anything to do with it being there, and was simply documenting that they are common in fish markets in Mexico.

      3. Life feeds on life. This is necessary. But this doesn’t mean we’ll run out.

  3. Sadly, the point here is “the average catch was around 26 pounds (12 kilograms)” – babies, unable to have a chance to grow to maturity and reproduce. As to the larger catches, there go the few remaining remaining big specimens with the better genes to pass on to future generations. This “fishery” (a horrendous euphemism for “population” will, in due course, collapse (not helped by climate change) unless stricter control measures are instigated – and enforced. Difficult to do, especially in poorer countries and remote areas. As to, “I believe that the giant sea bass may not qualify as a critically endangered species”, that is a blatant attempt to justify the poorly-regulated overfishing of this species, and is based on no evidence (in this article) other than the presence of the dead specimens in fish markets. The author may be at a university, but apparently no academic rigor has been applied to this “research”.

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