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North Atlantic Fisheries: An Environmental History, 1400-1700

Periodic Reporting for period 4 - NorFish (North Atlantic Fisheries: An Environmental History, 1400-1700)

Período documentado: 2020-07-01 hasta 2021-06-30

The project tested one key hypothesis:
* that historians have seriously underestimated the scale of pre-industrial North Atlantic fisheries; it is warranted to consider the expansion of fisheries in the sixteenth century as signalling a Fish Revolution.
We explored three main research questions:
(1) what were the natural and economic causes of the Fish Revolution, (2) how did marginal societies adapt to changes in international trade and consumption patterns around the North Atlantic, and (3) how did consumers, investors, and politics in the major European countries perceive and respond to the fish revolution?

Context
In 1497, John Cabot returned to Bristol from a voyage across the North Atlantic. He told of waters so thick with fish that they could be lifted straight on board in baskets. Within a few years, fishermen from all over Western Europe made the journey across the Atlantic. This was the beginning of the ‘Fish Revolution’ of the early-modern world.

The hypothesis indicates that the Fish Revolution was one of the first examples of the disrupting effects of globalisation and climate change. Knowing and establishing the answers to the research questions will help us understand the role of environment and climate change in the past, how markets impacted marginal communities, and how humans perceived long-term change.
Our comprehensive review of 25 North Atlantic fisheries shows that extractions during the early modern period, c. 1520-1790, vastly exceeded previous assumptions. North Atlantic fisheries for cod and herring were of an order of magnitude comparable to industrial fisheries for several centuries before the Industrial Revolution took off. This is a finding that challenges notions of relatively unimpacted marine ecosystems before the Industrial Age.

We identify two periods of accelerated marine extractions (1540-1620 and 1750-1790) when the growth rate of fish landings was higher than human demographic growth. These periods point to the role of fish supplies for the expansion of early-modern societies.

We have charted changing fish consumption preferences over the course of the early modern period.The most important human benefit of elevated marine exploitation was increased food security. Annual consumption of herring and cod almost doubled during the Fish Revolution of the sixteenth century from 2.9 to 5.7 kg per capita by 1790; total seafood consumption averaged 10 kg by 1790 with significant regional differences. The amount may be compared with the global average fish consumption of 10 kg in 1960, which includes other species as well. Access to cheap dried protein will have been critical to food security in pre-industrial societies.

There was a geographical shift in the focus of fisheries from east to west. Herring was increasingly sourced in the North Sea rather than the Baltic, and cod was caught in the Northwest Atlantic rather than the Northeast. The reorientation of geography was of geopolitical significance. Regional studies bring out the specificities of change in the Irish and Celtic Seas, the Danish North Sea fisheries, the Baltic, and North Atlantic islands.

Conditioned by market forces, the ‘fish revolution’ of the 1500s reshaped alignments in economic power, demography, and politics. With acute consequences in peripheral Atlantic settlements from Newfoundland to Scandinavia, it held strategic importance to all the major western European powers.

War and peace had an inverse effect on marine life. Wars brought a moratorium on fisheries that enabled fish populations to rebuild. In view of the scale of cod extractions in the 1780s, we conclude that the Napoleonic Wars brought a similar respite to Newfoundland cod to that of the “Great Fishing Experiments” of World War I and II.

Warfare and conflicts over access to fishing grounds constituted the main constraint on the herring and cod fisheries. The general downturn of landings after the 1620s, lasting into the eighteenth century, was broadly mirrored by a century of European warfare that was only effectively ended by the Treaties of Utrecht (1713-1714). While the conflicts drove up prices of fish and thus encouraged some fishers to go to the sea, the vagaries of the war caused fishing fleets to be destroyed or pillaged. Peace on the other hand was clearly associated with a steady rise in fishing effort. The relative peace of the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries provided European fishers with the opportunity to build and develop the extensive fisheries that constituted the second and third periods of elevated marine extractions.

Climate change (the downturn of North Atlantic temperatures in the second half of the seventeenth century and increased storminess) is likely to have reduced fishing effort, while changes in marine productivity, primarily zooplankton, may have impacted stock abundance. While the volatility of Northwest cod landings is probably best understood in a geopolitical context, the decadal volatility of North Sea herring landings indicates stock fluctuations that may be related to predator/prey relationship and volcanic eruptions driving marine productivity. There were distinct shifts in the balance of fish production between the Northeast and the Northwest Atlantic. Biophysical changes may potentially explain this see-saw phenomenon.

Scholarly implications
NorFish has significant methodological implications for marine environmental history. The project took a multi-disciplinary, humanities-led approach and established a robust quantitative framework of extractions, supplies and prices, while also charting the qualitative preferences and politics that motivated actors of the fish revolution across the North Atlantic. We have published on digital environmental history methodology in the course of the project.

Societal importance
The scale of pre-modern cod and herring fisheries underline the conclusion of Pinnegar & Engelhard (2008) that “ecosystems were not pristine before the onset of industrial fishing and it is difficult to assess the ‘virgin’ state of a population given that it may have been subject to moderate or even high levels of fishing mortality for many centuries.” Our findings provide essential information for our understanding of human impact on Life Below Water (United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 14) (UNDP).
Our finding that increased availability of fish likely played a significant role in the demographic rise of Western Europe (Maddison Project Database, 2020) is of relevance to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 2 (Zero Hunger) (UNDP).

We have discussed the broader implications of our findings in P. Holm, SDG 14 Life below Water. Exploiting and Managing an Alien and Unseen World. Martin Gutman & Daniel Gorman (eds), , Oxford University Press (expected publication data: Feb 2022) [F2]
NorFish demonstrates the potential of multi-lingual, multi-disciplinary collaboration to address a focussed set of questions. We have taken a lead in the development of a global data management consortium of historical marine data.
The historical index of ocean productivity (zooplankton) reaching back to 800CE will be of considerable interest for climate and ocean historical assessments. Another unexpected breakthrough is the use of historical data to assess the impact of volcanic shocks on the marine ecosystem.
Outreach - Dutch Env Hum students at Trinity
NorFish - workshop Nov 2020
NorFish - Science Gallery
NorFish workshop - Trinity College Dublin
NorFish workshop - Poul Holm
NorFish - workshop Nov 2020
NorFish - space and settlement conference
Oceans Past conference 2017
OPP Bayscapces conference - Travis
NorFish website