‘Dark’ ships off Argentina ring alarms over possible illegal fishing 
By Elizabeth Claire Alberts AR Source: mongabay 6/3/2021
Elizabeth Claire Alberts
A new report from the NGO Oceana revealed that 800 foreign vessels from China, Taiwan, South Korea and Spain conducted 900,000 hours of visible fishing near Argentina’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ), but that there were more than 600,000 additional hours in which fishing vessels went “dark” by turning off their automatic identification systems (AIS).
When ships turn off their AIS, there is a strong likelihood that they’re engaging in some kind of illegal activity, such as entering Argentina’s EEZ to illegally fish, the report suggests.
 

While China had the highest number of incidences of AIS gaps, the report notes that the Spanish fleet went dark three times as often as the Chinese fleet, and that they spent nearly twice as long with no AIS signal as they did visibly fishing.
The report also documents that more than 30% of dark vessels eventually traveled to the Port of Montevideo in neighboring Uruguay, a location favored by those involved in illegal fishing. It also notes that more than half of the dark vessels engaged with other ships at sea, most likely to transfer illegally caught fish without needing to go to port.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
26Tired angler thought hed regret dropping another line inidahostatesman2024-05-16US
27In the mystery of Floridas bizarre spinning fish, a leading suspect has emergedmsn2024-05-12US
28Illinois Tried to Bait Restaurants With Carp But Customers Wont Bitechicago.eater2024-05-17US
29Recreational Fishing on the Klamath and Trinity Shut Down For the Second Consecutive Yearlostcoastoutpost2024-05-17US
30Paddlefish, East Grand Forks archery hunt and sturgeon nuggets that didnt make the cutechopress2024-05-25US
31Walleye fishing challenge offers prizes to anglers for fishing dataPort Huron Times Herald2024-05-24US
32Meet the farmer: Jasvir Singh Aujlathefishsite2024-05-26IN
33Community mourns thousands of fish lost as B.C. drought risk looms againbowenislandundercurrent2024-05-08CA
34Chinese scientists breed endangered fish speciesXinhua2024-05-09CN
35Anglers break records with whopping 40lb fishyahoo2024-05-11UK
36Meet the woman turning Yellowknife's fish waste into gardening goldCBC News2024-05-11CA
37This voracious U.S. catfish species is now in OntarioCBC News2024-05-06CA
38Georgia angler hooks unique-looking fishFox News2024-05-23US
39East Grand Forks woman reels in 56-inch sturgeonechopress2024-05-22US
40Nice weather equals a nice openerechopress2024-05-15US
41River creature — with intensely red eyes – found as new species in Brazilmiamiherald2024-05-22BR
42Canada and U.S. suspend all fishing for Canadian-origin Yukon River chinook salmonbrandonsun2024-05-22CA
43Судак и «море»ohotniki2024-05-15RU
44Researchers optimise feeds for red snapper aquaculturethefishsite2024-05-22SG
45Wanda Fish unveils its first cell-cultivated bluefin tuna productthefishsite2024-05-21IL
46Colorado angler helps authorities crack down on gigantic invasive fishFox News2024-05-15US
47Two Georgia anglers recognized as newest state saltwater record holdersFox News2024-05-15US
48Alabama teen hopes to set state fishing record after reeling in species new to watersFox News2024-05-20US
49Ultra-rare fish, almost never seen by humansFox News2024-05-21US
50Graveyard of dead fish forms in southern Ukraine after Kakhovka dam destructionThe Independent2023-08-06UA

199 200 201 1 of [202 - pages.]