2009 Radio & TV Interviews

March 17 BC Almanac Nutrition Guidelines Rashid Sumaila Windows Media
March 16 CBC.ca Advice to eat fish hurts environment Rashid Sumaila Acrobat Reader
March 15 Radio New Zealand International US fishing subsidies to American Samoa and others contributing to overfishing Rashid Sumaila Acrobat Reader
March 14 Radio France Daniel Pauly Daniel Pauly Real Player
March 9 Discovery News Fish fare best at economic extremes by Emily Sohn Rashid Sumaila Acrobat Reader
March 2 SVT.Se Svensk naiv TV-kfritikk Daniel Pauly Acrobat Reader
March 2 Radio Canada International Canada en las Americas: Cuantos peces hay en el oceano? by Christian Sida
Feb. 25 Swedish Public Broadcasting, SVT.se Rosa Guld (Pink Gold)

Translation

Daniel Pauly Acrobat Reader
Feb. 25 Svt.se Odlad lax ger mindre fisk i haven Daniel Pauly Real Player
Feb. 13 WBUR Boston Cod population could plummet by 2050 by Sascha Pfeiffer Real Player
Feb. 12 CNN.com Fish migrating to cooler waters by Azadeh Ansari William Cheung Acrobat Reader
Feb. 12 STV News Fish seen shifting 125 miles by 2050 due to warming by Alister Doyle William Cheung Acrobat Reader
Jan. 16 iNews 880 Fish Poop: New Findings! Villy Christensen Acrobat Reader
Jan. 16 Komo News Fish poop helps balance ocean’s acid levels Villy Christensen Acrobat Reader
Jan. 16 Press TV Fish control seawater harmful acid levels Acrobat Reader
Jan. 15 CBC.ca Study suggests fish waste helping neutralize carbon dioxide levels in oceans Villy Christensen Acrobat Reader
Jan. 15 CBC.ca Fish feces reduce ocean CO2 levels Villy Christensen Acrobat Reader
Jan. 15 KSL.com Fish poop helps balance ocean’s acid levels Acrobat Reader
Jan. 15 FoxNews.com Fish feces may maintain ocean acid balance Acrobat Reader
Jan. 15 Eyewitness News Fish poop helps balance ocean’s acid levels Acrobat Reader
Jan. 15 DiscoverChannel.com Fish poop helps balance ocean acidity Acrobat Reader
Jan. 15 Central Florida News 13 Fish poop helps balance ocean’s acid levels Acrobat Reader
Jan. 15 CTV.ca Fish feces may help neutralize carbon dioxide levels Villy Christensen Acrobat Reader
Jan. 15 STV.tv Fish digestions help keep the oceans healthy Villy Christensen Acrobat Reader
Jan. 15 KATU.com Scientists find benefit to fish poop by Scott Sistek Acrobat Reader
Jan. 15 CBS News Fish poop helps balance ocean’s acid levels Acrobat Reader
Jan. 15 KOMO News Scientists find benefit to fish poop by Scott Sistek Acrobat Reader
Jan. 15 KTAR.com Fish poop helps balance ocean’s acid levels Acrobat Reader

William Cheung – Associated Faculty

williamWilliam’s research interests focus on assessing the impacts of climate change, fisheries and other human activities on marine biodiversity and ecosystem services, modeling marine ecosystem, assessing extinction vulnerability, developing conservation risk indicators, and bio-economic evaluations.

He completed his Ph.D. in Resource Management and Environmental Studies at the Fisheries Centre, the University of British Columbia (UBC). Subsequently, he worked as a post-doctoral fellow with the Sea Around Us Project. He is currently a lecturer in marine ecosystem services at the University of East Anglia, United Kingdom, but maintains active collaborations with the Sea Around Us. William works on various interdisciplinary research projects that range from global-scale analysis to regional studies in China, Australia and Canada. Examples of his recent research include projecting global impacts of climate change on marine biodiversity and fisheries potential, evaluating socio-economic impacts of fisheries management policies in Hong Kong, modeling the South China Sea ecosystem, and developing a fuzzy logic expert system to reconstruct historical abundance of exploited fish populations in British Columbia, Canada. He has been serving as a member of the IUCN Species Specialist Group for Groupers and Wrasses since 2005.

Selected Publications

Cheung, W.W.L., Lam, V., Sarmiento, J., Kearney, K., Watson, R., Zeller, D. and Pauly, D. (2009) Large-scale redistribution of maximum fisheries catch potential in the global ocean under climate change. Global Change Biology doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2009.01995.x.

Cheung, W.W.L., Lam, V.W.Y., Sarmiento, J.L., Kearney, K., Watson, R. and Pauly, D. (2009) Projecting global marine biodiversity impacts under climate change scenarios. Fish and Fisheries: 10: 235-251

Cheung, W.W.L., Close, C., Lam, V.W.Y., Watson, R. and Pauly, D. (2008). Application of macroecological theory to predict effects of climate change on global fisheries potential. Marine Ecology Progress Series 365: 187-197.

Cheung, W.W.L. and Sumaila, U.R. (2008). Trade-offs between conservation and socio-economic objectives in managing a tropical marine ecosystem. Ecological Economics 66: 193-210.

Cheung, W.W.L. and Pitcher, T.J. (2008). Evaluating the status of exploited taxa in the northern South China Sea using intrinsic vulnerability and spatially explicit catch-per-unit-effort data. Fisheries Research 92: 28-40.

Cheung W.W.L., Watson, R., Morato, T., Pitcher, T.J. and Pauly, D. (2007). Intrinsic vulnerability in the global fish catch. Marine Ecology Progress Series 333: 1-12.

Cheung W.W.L., Pitcher, T.J. and Pauly, D. (2005). A fuzzy logic expert system to estimate intrinsic extinction vulnerability of marine fishes to fishing. Biological Conservation 124: 97-111.

Sadovy Y. and Cheung, W.L. (2003). Near extinction of a highly fecund fish: the one that nearly got away. Fish and Fisheries 4: 86-99.

First Global Estimate of Fish Biomass

fishrocksSea Around Us Project member Villy Christensen is author on a paper that provides first-ever estimate of worldwide fish biomass and impact on climate change. Read the press release and the full study published in Science (here also is a link to the associated ‘perspective’ article). Below is a video animation of fish excreting pellets of calcium carbonate, a chalk-like substance also known as “gut rocks,” in a process completely separate from food digestion (animation by Dalai Felinto).

2009 Magazine Coverage

Ar’ash Tavakolie – Senior Web Developer

arash_bioAr’ash is a software developer, and comes from an engineering/Artificial Intelligence background. He has been designing and developing .NET based solutions for about eight years.

Ar’ash designs and maintains the Sea Around Us suite of web applications and the related databases. He is currently busy working on ‘SwordFish (SF)’, which will replace the core components of legacy code with a multi-tiered architecture [DataWarehouse + AnalysisEngine + ClientModules]. He is developing SF to make the web/databases applications more agile, extensible and also lower the maintenance costs. SwordFish is based on OLAP/BI, C#, and .NET technologies. SF prototypes showed that MDX querying language is closer to the domain and can reduce the lines of codes by 80%.

Ar’ash is also an avid tea fan and likes reading books. Currently his favorite novelist is Haruki Murakami and his favorite programming gargoyle/guru/writer is Martin Fowler “Any fool can write code that a computer can understand. Good programmers write code that humans can understand.” Ar’ash regularly and enthusiastically baffles project staff during meetings by trumping the biologists’ ability to talk in technical jargon.

2009 Miscellaneous Media

2009 Newspaper Coverage


2008 Magazine Coverage

2008 Miscellaneous Media