It's amazing to me how we can think, (and I don't fault anyone for feeling that way), that a resource is "unlimited" and that it can be harvested without concern for its well being in the future.....ignorance is bliss and who would have every thought as you watch literally hundreds of thousands of Horseshoe Crabs crowding the beaches that using them for Crab Bait could ever make a dent in the population.....goes to show that billions of eggs don't make for future generations......
We've certainly made that mistake...with everything from the Eskimo Curlew to Upland Sandpipers to Golden Plovers during the market hunting days, "JUST LOOK AT THEM THEY BLACKEN THE SKY", to the accidentally crashing the REd Knot population by depleting they're food source, (and interestingly you never hear about the impact to "other than" Knots that you know has to have happened when that enormous food source disappeared).....fortunately for us ignorance is sometimes replaced with knowledge before its too late and perhaps with the Red Knot we will have a success...Eskimo Curlews were shot past the point of return and Golden Plovers have never rebounded to previous highs but maybe, just maybe, if the Crabs rebound to previous highs so to will the Knots...and with them all the other, "lesser species", that have also declined as a result.....
I didn't follow what I'm sure was a "fight" to close the Crab harvest....ignorance can be deeply imbedded, and even more so when there are livelihoods entwined, and the "fear" of change causes many people to fight it....I feel for the Watermen who's lives were effected by the need to restrict what was once an open and unlimited season but "sometimes" you have to give up on "heritage" to insure the future.....and frankly I think a Red Knot presence is far more important than the next plate of scungilli.....
Maybe we'll get smarter in the future with Stripers and Cod and Tuna.....perhaps?.....
Steve