Skip to content

Southern Fried Science

Over 15 years of ocean science and conservation online

  • Home
  • About SFS
  • Authors
  • Support SFS

Book Review: Five Fundamentals for Fisheries

Posted on April 18, 2011April 19, 2011 By Andrew Thaler 1 Comment on Book Review: Five Fundamentals for Fisheries
Conservation

Daniel Pauly’s research over the last 20 has provided much of the foundational theory in modern fisheries management. In 5 Easy Pieces, Daniel Pauly presents his five most influential papers, with a concise history of both the intellectual and human motivations that led to each study. The papers that were included in this volume are: Primary Production required to Sustain Global Fisheries, Fishing Down Marine Food Webs, Systematic Distortion in World Fisheries Catch Trends, Towards Sustainability in Global Fisheries, and The Future of Fisheries.

Students of marine conservation should already be familiar with most of this book’s content. If you haven’t read any of Pauly’s work before, or are just starting out in marine science, this book is an excellent and essential addition to your collection. If you’re familiar with his work, and have read these five papers (and responses and critiques), you won’t find much new in this volume. The back stories are interesting, but the real meat is in the papers themselves.

These are important papers, and having all five of them together, complete with responses, new reports, critiques, and the lead author’s personal exposition, is a useful addition to the library of any student of marine conservation. I enjoyed reading about the people behind the paper, how different groups responded to their publication, and what effects these papers had on both fisheries management and scientific progress. Pauly provides enough background to allow a non-specialist audience to read and understand the technical details of each paper, and takes his time carefully and clearly expanding upon the issues each paper raises. The chapter on sustainability is especially pithy. The final chapter on the future of fisheries is simultaneously disheartening and hopefully, the kind of message you should expect from an honest assessment of the ocean.

I try not to delve too much into design and layout when talking about books, but 5 Easy Pieces is a unique format for a popular science book, and the design requires some critique. Using full text peer-reviewed publications as the foundation of each chapter is an interesting idea, and one not without merit, but it was not well implemented. I found the transitions from the authors prose to the papers jarring, which wasn’t helped by the heavy shadowboxes meant to delineate previously published works from original content. For small extracts, I could see that working, but when the quoted text takes up the bulk of space, the shadowboxes become far too distracting. Likewise, the occasional shift from single into double column seriously interrupts the flow of what was otherwise very readable prose. This book could have benefited from more attention to detail in the design (there’s even an iStockphoto watermark on the cover).

If your new to marine conservation, aren’t familiar with these five papers, or are interested in the nuts and bolts that go into these kinds of studies,  pick up a copy of 5 Easy Pieces. If you’re already following Pauly’s work and read these papers when they appeared in Science and Nature, you can probably give this book a pass.

Share this:

  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon

Related

Tags: Book Review daniel pauly fisheries

Post navigation

❮ Previous Post: Beneath the Waves Film Festival: Shifting Gears
Next Post: Resource Dependent Communities in a Globalizing World ❯

You may also like

Science
Just enough about “Certainly More Than You Want to Know About The Fishes of The Pacific Coast” to pique your curiosity
October 14, 2011
Weekly Salvage
How goats got the bends, a new ship for VIMS, a new deep-sea submersible for all of us, our looming destruction, and more! Monday Morning Salvage: October 15, 2018.
October 15, 2018
Weekly Salvage
“When we left the beach…” Monday Morning Salvage: March 20, 2017
March 20, 2017
Weekly Salvage
2 minutes to midnight, 3D printed turtle eggs, awkward fiddlers, Egyptian welders, and more! Monday Morning Salvage: January 29, 2018.
January 29, 2018

One thought on “Book Review: Five Fundamentals for Fisheries”

  1. Greg Barron says:
    May 7, 2011 at 2:22 pm

    Sounds like a good recommendation. Just got one ordered up. Amazon has em. I also got and am looking forward to “An Unnatural History of the Sea” by Dr Robert Callum. And one of my own recommnedations. “Sea Change” and “Wild Ocean” by Dr. Sylvia Earle

Comments are closed.

Popular Posts

The story of the pride flag made from NASA imagery: Bluesky's most-liked imageThe story of the pride flag made from NASA imagery: Bluesky's most-liked imageSeptember 27, 2024David Shiffman
"Why Sustainable Seafood Matters" is now available for preorder! Here's what it's about, and why I decided to write it."Why Sustainable Seafood Matters" is now available for preorder! Here's what it's about, and why I decided to write it.June 8, 2026David Shiffman
What Ocean Ramsey does is not shark science or conservation: some brief thoughts on "the Shark Whisperer" documentaryWhat Ocean Ramsey does is not shark science or conservation: some brief thoughts on "the Shark Whisperer" documentaryJuly 2, 2025David Shiffman
Shark of Darkness: Wrath of Submarine is a fake documentaryShark of Darkness: Wrath of Submarine is a fake documentaryAugust 10, 2014Michelle Jewell
I just told 850 shark scientists a hard truth: We’re not communicating shark conservation correctly.I just told 850 shark scientists a hard truth: We’re not communicating shark conservation correctly.June 1, 2026David Shiffman
Deep-sea Mining, Domestic Cats, Star Trek, and Ocean Exploration: Andrew's mid-year podcast round-up.Deep-sea Mining, Domestic Cats, Star Trek, and Ocean Exploration: Andrew's mid-year podcast round-up.June 6, 2026Andrew Thaler
Why ocean science is still one of the worst-funded scientific fields worldwideWhy ocean science is still one of the worst-funded scientific fields worldwideJune 3, 2026Chris Parsons
What is a Sand Shark?What is a Sand Shark?November 12, 2017Chuck Bangley
That's not a blobfish: Deep Sea Social Media is Flooded by AI SlopThat's not a blobfish: Deep Sea Social Media is Flooded by AI SlopDecember 19, 2025Andrew Thaler
Tackling the least important debate in deep-sea mining: the desultory hyphenTackling the least important debate in deep-sea mining: the desultory hyphenJune 8, 2026Andrew Thaler
Subscribe to our RSS Feed for updates whenever new articles are published.

We recommend Feedly for RSS management. It's like Google Reader, except it still exists.

Southern Fried Science

  • Home
  • About SFS
  • Authors
  • Support SFS


If you enjoy Southern Fried Science, consider contributing to our Patreon campaign.

Copyright © 2026 Southern Fried Science.

Theme: Oceanly Premium by ScriptsTown