His involvement “for having revealed the true scale of overfishing in the planet’s oceans” has led him to become the 30th scientist to receive this award from the team at Les Années lumière.

An expert in marine resources, Daniel Pauly is a professor at the University of British Columbia’s Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries. Since 1999, he has been leading a research project on fishery trends around the world: Sea Around Us. In an article published in Nature Communications in January 2016, Daniel Pauly and his colleague Dirk Zeller demonstrate that, since the 1950s, fish catches reported by countries to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) are much lower than actual figures.

Daniel Pauly will be featured on the program Les années lumière (in French), this Sunday, January 22, 2017 between 12:00 and 2:00 p.m.

Listen the interview (in French).

The program Découverte (in French) will feature a report on this scientist on the same day at 6:30 p.m.

 To learn more:

Daniel Pauly, Radio-Canada Scientist of the Year (in French)

Radio-Canada’s Scientist of the Year Award (in French)

Biography of researcher Daniel Pauly

Nature Communication: Catch reconstructions reveal that global marine fisheries catches are higher than reported and declining

On Whales Online: Les mammifères marins et les pêcheries sont-ils en compétition pour les ressources  (in French)

 

News - 20/1/2017

Marie-Sophie Giroux

Marie-Sophie Giroux joined the GREMM in 2005 until 2018. She holds a Bachelor’s degree in Marine Biology and a diploma in Environmental Consulting. As Lead Naturalist, she oversees and coordinates the team working at the Marine Mammal Interpretation Centre and writes for Whales Online and Whale Portraits. She loves to share “whale stories” with visitors to the CIMM and readers alike.

Recommended articles

Rice’s Whale: Newly Discovered and Already on the Brink of Extinction

Though only discovered in 2021, the Rice’s whale (Balaenoptera ricei) is one of the most endangered whales in the world.…

|News 10/10/2024

Exploring the oceans of the past through extinct whales

Long before the whales that we know and love roamed the seas of the planet, many different creatures lurked in…

|News 11/11/2024

Once upon a time, there was the St. Lawrence beluga…

A year-round resident of the St. Lawrence, the beluga inspires admiration. With their ever-smirky facial expressions, belugas have become one…

|News 23/10/2024