期刊论文详细信息
PeerJ
Shifting headlines? Size trends of newsworthy fishes
article
Fiona T. Francis1  Brett R. Howard1  Adrienne E. Berchtold1  Trevor A. Branch2  Laís C.T. Chaves1  Jillian C. Dunic1  Brett Favaro1  Kyla M. Jeffrey1  Luis Malpica-Cruz1  Natalie Maslowski1  Jessica A. Schultz1  Nicola S. Smith1  Isabelle M. Côté1 
[1] Earth to Ocean Research Group, Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University;School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington
关键词: Fisheries;    Sportfishing;    Charismatic megafauna;    Journalism;    Shifting baseline;    Record-setting;   
DOI  :  10.7717/peerj.6395
学科分类:社会科学、人文和艺术(综合)
来源: Inra
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【 摘 要 】

The shifting baseline syndrome describes a gradual lowering of human cognitive baselines, as each generation accepts a lower standard of resource abundance or size as the new norm. There is strong empirical evidence of declining trends of abundance and body sizes of marine fish species reported from docks and markets. We asked whether these widespread trends in shrinking marine fish are detectable in popular English-language media, or whether news writers, like many marine stakeholders, are captive to shifting baselines. We collected 266 English-language news articles, printed between 1869 and 2015, which featured headlines that used a superlative adjective, such as ‘giant’, ‘huge’, or ‘monster’, to describe an individual fish caught. We combined the reported sizes of the captured fish with information on maximum species-specific recorded sizes to reconstruct trends of relative size (reported size divided by maximum size) of newsworthy fishes over time. We found some evidence of a shifting baseline syndrome in news media over the last 140 years: overall, the relative length of the largest fish worthy of a headline has declined over time. This pattern held for charismatic fish species (e.g. basking sharks, whale sharks, giant mantas), which are now reported in the media at smaller relative lengths than they were near the turn of the 20th century, and for the largest species under high risk of extinction. In contrast, there was no similar trend for pelagic gamefish and oceanic sharks, or for species under lower risk of extinction. While landing any individual of the large-bodied ‘megafish’ may be newsworthy in part because of their large size relative to other fish species, the ‘megafish’ covered in our dataset were small relative to their own species—on average only 56% of the species-specific maximum length. The continued use in the English-language media of superlatives to describe fish that are now a fraction of the maximum size they could reach, or a fraction of the size they used to be, does reflect a shifting baseline for some species. Given that media outlets are a powerful tool for shaping public perception and awareness of environmental issues, there is a real concern that such stories might be interpreted as meaning that superlatively large fish still abound.

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CC BY   

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