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Quota filled, bluefin tuna hunt ends early
Jeremy Hance
mongabay.com
June 09, 2010



The European Commission (EC) has announced an early end to the Atlantic bluefin tuna season since the quota of 13,500 tons has been met. The fishing will end at 11:59 tonight GMT.

"The closure of the purse seine fishery is necessary to protect the fragile stock of bluefin tuna and to ensure its recovery, as envisaged by the recovery plan of the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tuna (ICCAT)," the EC said in a statement. "The Commission has declared a zero tolerance approach towards overfishing and will take all necessary measures to ensure full compliance across the board."

However, environmentalists—long critical of ICCAT's management of the Atlantic bluefin tuna—argue that scientific data proves the Atlantic bluefin tuna is already dramatically overfished, possibly leading the massive fish species to extinction.

"What has surprised me," writes a Greenpeace activist in response to the announcement in a blog, "is the speed with which the quotas were filled."

The Atlantic bluefin tuna fishing season has already been pared down to a single month, but bad weather had largely prevented fishing for the first two weeks this year. Still the fishing season is ending a week early, which implies that most of the quota was filled in approximately one week.

"This shows just how good they are at catching the fish in a short space of time, and just how powerful the bluefin tuna catching machine is when it gets going. Little wonder that this method has to be so strongly restricted, and little wonder it has wrought such damage," the Greenpeace blogger continues.

The Atlantic bluefin tuna, listed as Critically Endangered by the IUCN Red List, has become a flashpoint between conservationists and the fishing industry. Fetching incredibly high prices in the Japanese sushi market, the species' population has dropped by 80 percent since 1970.

Environmentalists have long been calling for a total ban of Atlantic bluefin tuna fishing, yet just such a ban failed this year at the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) after heavy lobbying from Japan. A report by WWF has warned that if fishing continues the species will be functionally extinct by 2012.







Related articles

The bluefin tuna wars: Greenpeace and Sea Shepherd step up tactics to save Critically Endangered species

(06/07/2010) Things have become ugly in the Mediterranean: over the weekend, fishermen and Greenpeace activists squared off over the fate of the Critically Endangered bluefin tuna. One run-in, in which Greenpeace worked to free tuna from fishermen's nets, left one activist in the hospital after a fisherman sunk a hook in the activist's leg. Meanwhile, the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society has announced a 'Blue Rage' campaign that will target illegal fishing of bluefin tuna.


The good old days: 17 times easier to catch fish in 1889

(05/05/2010) It is widely recognized that fish populations have dropped drastically over the past century, but a new study in Nature Communications shows the decline may be worse than expected. Research from the University of York and the Marine Conservation Society has discovered that it was 17 times easier in the UK to catch fish in 1889—when ships were powered by sail—than it is today using high-powered motor boats with technological advances.


History repeats itself: the path to extinction is still paved with greed and waste

(04/05/2010) As a child I read about the near-extinction of the American bison. Once the dominant species on America's Great Plains, I remember books illustrating how train-travelers would set their guns on open windows and shoot down bison by the hundreds as the locomotive sped through what was left of the wild west. The American bison plunged from an estimated 30 million to a few hundred at the opening of the 20th century. When I read about the bison's demise I remember thinking, with the characteristic superiority of a child, how such a thing could never happen today, that society has, in a word, 'progressed'. Grown-up now, the world has made me wiser: last month the international organization CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species) struck down a ban on the Critically Endangered Atlantic bluefin tuna. The story of the Atlantic bluefin tuna is a long and mostly irrational one—that is if one looks at the Atlantic bluefin from a scientific, ecologic, moral, or common-sense perspective.






CITATION:
Jeremy Hance
mongabay.com (June 09, 2010). Quota filled, bluefin tuna hunt ends early . http://news.mongabay.com/2010/0609-hance_bluefin_quota.html


Tags:
Fish Fishing europe japan overfishing activism activists green environment oceans jeremy hance wildlife animals wildlife trade economics economy food sustainability endangered species extinction saving species from extinction

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