logo
Find us on
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
              
logo 11/22/2024 3:05:43 PM     
The cost of a fish sandwich: Why we need to reduce bycatch by Alaska’s trawl fleet 
By Krystalynn Nasisaq Scott, David Bayes and Michael Kampnich US Source: adn 11/20/2021

For decades, the North Pacific trawl fleet has dumped millions of pounds of salmon, halibut, sablefish and crab while targeting pollock, sole and flounder. The North Pacific Fisheries Management Council, or NPFMC, which works under the umbrella of the Department of Commerce and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, aka NOAA, has allowed this to happen; and has facilitated this waste by allowing various sectors of the trawl fleet to exceed bycatch limits, or by raising bycatch caps in-season, to prevent a trawl shut-down.
 

Much of the bycatch — dead marine life tossed overboard — is much more valuable, pound for pound, than the fish being targeted.

Many fish and crab stocks in the North Pacific Ocean are in a precipitous downward spiral and the thousands of Alaskans who depend on a healthy and productive marine/ocean environment for food or income have seen their ability to harvest salmon, halibut, sablefish and crab decimated.

Because of the scale of harvest involved in the trawl fisheries, 100% observer coverage should be required of every vessel and each tow made. Yet observer coverage for much of the fleet is nowhere near the 100% threshold. For example, trawl captains in the Gulf of Alaska are allowed to “self-report” their bycatch 85% of the time — their observer coverage is only 15%.

 
Atlantic halibut Pollock Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
76Rapid predator-prey balance shift follows critical-population-density transmission between codnature2024-10-29NO
77Colder water brings increased danger for boaters, paddlers as winter approachesechopress2024-10-23US
78Virginia floating pier nears completionechopress2024-10-28US
79fisheries supervisor floats introducing muskie to Kandiyohi County lakeechopress2024-10-18US
80Chasing Winnipesaukee Landlocked Salmonindepthnh2024-10-28US
81Canadian government awards CAD 830,000 for Quebec fisheries projectsseafoodsource2024-10-24CA
82MDC to stock nearly 10,400 rainbow trout in five urban lakeseinnews2024-10-28US
83Americans fined $8K for illegal fishing in Canadian watersCTV News2024-10-25CA
84Surfer Giulia Manfrini dies after being impaled by a needlefish in Indonesia9news2024-10-22AU
85Giant Fish Thought to Be Extinct Is Spotted in the Mekong RiverAssociated Press2024-10-22CO
86The tilapia hatchery that runs in the familythefishsite2024-08-28EG
87Puffer has lived 2 lifetimes at Everett libraryheraldnet2024-10-28US
88Record-breaking Black Buffalo fish caught in Stockton Lakekhqa2024-10-18US
89Роскосмос отслеживает загрязнение реки Ямуна в Индииhightech.fm2024-10-25RU
90Nick Lindner talks ice fishing, career ahead of F-M Walleyes Unlimited talkechopress2024-10-16CA
91How the invasive spiny water flea spread across Canada, and what we can do about ittheconversation2024-10-16CA
92Fishermen save fish from surprising, painful situationthenewstribune2024-10-17US
93US scientists explore hidden hydrogen treasure 5,000 feet below Lake SuperiorInteresting Engineering2024-10-17US
94Canadaway Creek brook trout stocking is Saturdayobservertoday2024-10-16US
95Canada proposes pilot project for Maritimes elver fisheryundercurrentnews2024-10-16CA
96Fly fishing is gaining in popularity for married couples and hikerscampbellrivermirror2024-10-16DE
97How climate change threat is being tackled by Scotlands salmon farmersscotsman2024-10-01UK
98Oyster farmers find northernmost blue angelfish ever reported off the coast of Cape Codboston2024-10-02US
99Fish firm filmed burying salmon on Scottish island beach illegallythenational2024-10-03UK
100Giant floating wind farms could destroy fishing industrystv2024-10-03UK

133 134 135 3 of [136 - pages.]