Episode 7 - Lida Pet-Soede on the World's Last Fisheries, Marine Conservation and Shifting Baselines
Lida Pet-Soede – on Is the global over fishing problem as bad as we’re told? Shifting baselines – what is viewed as normal today would have been unacceptable in the past.
Lida Pet-Soede is a senior strategic conservation and fisheries management professional. She has lived in many places around the world however most of her work has been based around Asia Pacific region, Indonesia and the Coral Triangle. Lida is originally from a dairy farm in the Netherlands, however discovered her love for the marine world whilst studying for her degree at Wageningen Agriculture University.
Captivated by the ocean, she went on to complete a Phd in Indonesia in Tropical Fisheries Biology and Management. Lida is currently enjoying the coastal gems of Cornwall but plans to move back to Indonesia in the near future.
Lida is a keen scuba diver, snorkeler and all round thalassophile. She has explored many amazing places, experiencing stunning underwater wilderness. Her career includes working with governments, NGOs and the private sector to achieve sustainable coastal and marine development in Indonesia and the Asia Pacific region. This includes project and strategy design, project review and evaluation, professional development coaching and creation of strategic partnerships. She conducts assessments and provides advice on tropical collaborative fisheries management, marine biodiversity conservation, sustainable aquaculture development, sustainable development in coastal communities, marine tourism, and policy reform for collaborative governance and management.
Lida is passionate about preserving our ocean for future generations and is currently focusing on the concept of Shifting Baselines. The concept that younger generations of divers may be blown away by the beauty of our waters. However, the reality is that it is just a fraction of the thriving ecosystem that it used to be. We cannot appreciate what is lost, if we never knew it was there. Using this as a focal point of her work, Lida hopes to motivate younger young people about lost ecosystems, and encourage them to focus their careers in solutions to rewild.
OTHER RELATED LINKS
Mapping the overlap between ocean industries and marine hotspots in the Coral Triangle.
Safeguarding the Blue Planet: Six strategies for accelerating ocean protection
Reexamining the science of marine protected areas: Linking knowledge to action
SARS and the live food fish trade in Indonesia: Some anecdotes
Effects of the 1998 Coral Morality Event on Kenyan Coral Reefs and Fisheries
Kenyan coral reef fish, fisheries and economics – trends and status after the 1998 coral mortality
Socioeconomic Assessment of the Impacts of the 1998 Coral Reef Bleaching in the Indian Ocean
Cyanide fishing on Indonesian coral reefs for the live food fish market – What is the problem?
An Economic Analysis of Blast Fishing on Indonesian Coral Reefs
The Status of the coral refs of India following the bleaching event of 1998
An overview and comparison of destructive fishing practices in Indonesia
How fresh is too fresh? The live reef food fish trade in Eastern Indonesia
Coral Bleaching in the Indian Ocean: SocioEconomic Assessment of Effects
IMPROVING COASTAL LIVELIHOODS THROUGH SUSTAINABLE AQUACULTURE PRACTICES
Can fishermen allocate their fishing effort in space and time on the basis of their catch rates?
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/what-i-learned-fishy-business-lida-pet