Bid to grant MSC 'ecolabel' to bluefin tuna fishery raises fears for ‘king of fish’ 
By Karen McVeigh US Source: the guardian 6/1/2020
Karen McVeigh
Credit: Pablo Blázquez Domínguez/Getty
A decade ago, the highly prized “king of fish”, the bluefin tuna, was taken off menus in high-end restaurants and shunned by top chefs, amid warnings by environmentalists that it was being driven to extinction. Recent assessments of eastern Atlantic bluefin tuna, which can grow to the size of a small car and live for up to 40 years, have shown much healthier populations.

But now conservationists and scientists are warning that the largest and most valuable tuna species could once again be under threat if a Japanese bluefin fishery in the eastern Atlantic Ocean is awarded an internationally recognised “ecolabel” they claim is based on flawed science.
 

On Monday 1 June, an independent judge will hear evidence from the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and the Pew Charitable Trusts, the Japanese fishery and assessors for the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC), to help determine whether the assessors were right to recommend the fishery receives its label. If approved, the Japanese company Usufuku Honten can sell the first ever MSC-certified bluefin tuna to consumers, marking it as a well-managed sustainable fishery.

WWF and Pew will argue strongly against the award, saying it is too early to declare that the bluefin tuna stock is fully recovered. They have identified a “number of shortfalls” in the assessment process and say there has been a lack of impartiality.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4651Three Second Fish Memory 'Just Rubbish'; Learning And Memory 'Quite Sophisticated'Underwatertimes2010-01-14AU
4652Man catches carp the weight of Kylie Minoguetelegraph2010-01-11FR
4653Big freeze and ice is 'good for pond life'BBC News2010-01-11UK
4654New Acoustic Telemetry System Helps Explain Salmon Migration; 'A Clearer, More Complete Picture'Underwatertimes2010-01-08US
4655Giant river fish faces extinction after years of overfishingthe guardian2010-01-05US
4656Michigan balks at Obama's stance in Asian carp fightcs monitor2010-01-06US
4657Man gets house arrest for fish smugglingupi2009-12-31US
4658Sawridge Creek flood study will replace one from 1993lakesideleader2020-12-16CA
4659Michigan asks U.S. to block fish invasionUPI2009-12-21CA
4660Banned snakehead fish Rocky dies a year after being targeted by state officialsThe Post-Standard 2009-03-23US
4661Carp battle not over yetJournal Sentinel2009-11-27US
4662Biologists save fish after landslideusatoday2009-11-10US
4663It’s Official, Bass Season is Open Now in Ontario’s Zone 20fishncanada2021-02-19CA
4664Gigantic Black Crappie Sets New State Recordfishncanada2021-02-19US
4665Despite pandemic challenges, B.C. lakes stocked with millions of fishvancouversun2021-02-08CA
4666Lillooet River project a major undertaking, says new reportpiquenewsmagazine2019-04-29CA
4667The odd Hawaiianfish that Climb CliffsBBC News2021-02-10US
4668Taranaki workmates land massive fish on tiny 'undersize' boatstuff2021-02-10NZ
4669Fish Kill: Nanosilver Mutates Fish Embryosscientificamerican2009-11-17US
467095-pound catfish caught in OhioOdd News2009-11-11US
4671Farming Fish in the Skyhakaimagazine2021-02-08SG
4672Missouri man fined more than $6,000 for possessing fish over the legal limittbnewswatch2021-02-05US
4673Ask Dr. Universe: How can you tell if a fish is female or male?spokesman2021-02-07US
4674Biologist calls for judicial inquiry on salmon declinectvbc2009-10-03CA
4675How do you train a fish?BBC News 2009-10-02US

219 220 221 186 of [222 - pages.]