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
1851Social rules help varied personalities work as a teamtheguardian2023-03-02UK
1852Rare fish released into Yangtze River in East Chinachinadaily2023-03-03CN
1853Electrofishing allows aquatic experts to count fish in the Curdies River to check river healthabc2023-03-04AU
1854Giant invasive fish caught in pond in southern TaiwanTaiwan News2023-03-05TW
1855Are the feds sacrificing endangered salmon to help potato farmers?salon2023-02-25US
1856Social rules help varied personalities work as a team, fish study showscoventrytelegraph2023-02-27UK
1857Angler pulls 57-pound lake trout through the ice; ‘I was frozen’news.yahoo2023-03-15CA
1858More than $100K in fines issued for illegal fishing along B.C. coast, DFO saysCTVNewsVancouver2023-03-17CA
1859Positive signs in newest capelin stock assessmentCBC News2023-03-16CA
1860Fish are displayed as living works of art at colorful aquarium in Tokyostripes2023-03-02JP
1861Endangered salmon will swim in California river for first time in 80 yearslatimes2022-07-16US
1862Plummeting salmon population could trigger closure of fishing season in California waterslatimes2023-03-02US
1863Owner of fishing boat missing at sea suffers theft of fish potsloopnews2023-03-03UK
1864Hydropower killing, injuring and trapping fish by the tonnemsn2023-03-06US
1865Gruesome vision reveals 'freaking weird' battles between ocean giantsnews.yahoo2023-02-25US
1866José Andrés Wants You to Eat More Lionfishfoodandwine2023-02-28US
1867Freshwater Fish Are a ‘Significant Source’ of Forever Chemicalssentientmedia2023-02-28US
1868Fish fights erupt after mass coral bleaching, study findsmongabay2023-03-01ID
1869Louisiana fishermen film chaotic shark feeding frenzyFOX 13 News2023-03-01US
1870Two coal and mining companies are said to be responsible for the death of fishindonewyork2023-03-02DE
1871Invasive goldfish the size of footballs are spreading from Vancouver to other parts of B.C.CBC News2023-03-03CA
1872Experts pushing for high-seas fishing ban win ‘Nobel Prize for environment’mongabay2023-02-22US
1873Lost at sea: The hidden cost of ghost gearfrance242023-02-24FR
1874Bangladesh bans suckermouth catfish in light of threats to native fish speciesmongabay2023-02-23ID
187516-crew tuna fishing vessel missing in Indian oceanfleetmon2023-02-24TW

215 216 217 74 of [218 - pages.]