Overfishing
Embed This Widget
Add the script tag and a data attribute to embed this widget.
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/fishfyi-embed@1/dist/embed.min.js" defer></script>
<div data-fishfyi="glossary" data-slug="overfishing"></div>
Embed via iframe for maximum compatibility.
<iframe src="https://fishfyi.com/iframe/glossary/overfishing/" width="420" height="400" frameborder="0" style="border:0;border-radius:10px;max-width:100%" loading="lazy"></iframe>
Paste this URL in WordPress, Medium, or any oEmbed-compatible platform.
https://fishfyi.com/glossary/overfishing/
Add a dynamic SVG badge to your README or docs.
[](https://fishfyi.com/glossary/overfishing/)
Use the native HTML custom element.
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/fishfyi-embed@1/dist/embed.min.js" defer></script>
<fishfyi-glossary slug="overfishing"></fishfyi-glossary>
Tanım
Harvesting fish at a rate faster than the population can reproduce and replenish itself, leading to stock decline. The Grand Banks cod collapse is a stark historical example.
Ayrıntılı Açıklama
The Grand Banks cod collapse, in which a population supporting 500 years of fishing virtually disappeared within two decades of industrial fishing, is the paradigmatic example of overfishing consequences. The collapse cost 35,000 jobs and has not recovered despite a moratorium maintained since 1992, demonstrating that fishing pressure can drive populations below the minimum viable threshold for self-recovery. Two-thirds of global fish stocks are now at or beyond sustainable limits. Overfishing removes large, reproductively valuable individuals disproportionately, causing evolutionary pressures toward earlier maturity and smaller body size — 'fisheries-induced evolution' that reduces long-term stock productivity.