BLNR fines Hawaii island couple $272,000 after aquarium fish collecting incident 
US Source: star advertiser 2/26/2021

Two Hawaii island fishers have been fined a record $272,000 after an illegal aquarium fishing incident in Kona last year, the state Department of Land and Natural Resources said.

The Board of Land and Natural Resources today voted unanimously to fine the fishers, which the DLNR’s Division of Aquatic Resources said are record fines for those types of violations.

“The Land Board is obviously taking a strong stance against the illegal harvest of aquarium fish,” BLNR Chairwoman Suzanne Case said in a statement. “I applaud our DOCARE officers for their work tracking and investigating these cases, and the DAR staff for their expertise in documenting the illegal takes and presenting a detailed account of these egregious actions to the BLNR for consideration. I hope anyone engaged in illegally depleting Hawai‘i’s natural resources will realize the cost of breaking the law, based on the high fines levied in this case.”
 

Married couple Stephen Howard and Yukako Toriyama were ordered to pay the civil fines after a Sept. 15 incident that involved the two on a boat fishing within the West Hawaii Regional Fishery Management Area.

The DLNR said that Howard, an aquarium collector, had dropped off two women — one being Toriyama — to dive in the area to collect fish. Personnel from DLNR’s Division of Conservation and Resources Enforcement ordered Howard back to shore, leaving the two women in the water.

The missing women “prompted a multi-agency marine search and rescue operation” that was then called off “after the women were spotted late in the afternoon, with their dive gear, at a Kona-area gas station.”

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4826City to test Whitson River todaySudbury Star2015-09-02CA
4827Intersex fish and superbugs: Kiwis warned to watch what they flushstuff2021-01-09NZ
4828Guy Harvey Award up for grabs in 2021 fish art contestSun Sentinel2021-01-05US
4829Maryland angler sets state's first record for invasive flathead catfishfoxnews2021-01-07US
4830Local father, son hooked on a new addiction: ice fishingorilliamatters2021-01-07CA
4831Want a fishing memory that will last a lifetime? Visit this Idaho taxidermistidahostatesman2021-01-12CA
4832B.C. coast used as a 'sewer' by salmon farmers: scientistCBC News2006-10-12CA
4833Long-lived Deep-sea Fishes Imperiled by Technology, Overfishing; 'We Shouldn't Eat Grandmother'Underwatertimes2007-02-18US
4834Farmed Salmon Could Become an Invasive Species in Forest StreamsUnderwatertimes2007-03-08US
4835Thames 'clean enough' for salmonbbc news2007-03-26UK
4836Study: Fish 'Catch Shares' Scheme Reduces By-catch, Increases Per-Boat Revenue, Boosts SafetyUnderwatertimes2007-03-28US
4837Chesapeake Bay receives another D+ on health report, due largely to struggling rockfish populationbaltimore sun2021-01-05US
4838Royal Navy sends four warships into English Channeldaily mail2021-01-02UK
4839Massive operation nets fleet of illegal fishersthe age2006-04-06AU
4840Gender-changing fish are studiedUnited Press International2006-04-11US
4841Scientists Try to Count Fish in SeaWashington Post2006-04-10US
484230 New Fish Species Discovered On Borneo; 'The More We Look the More We Find'Underwatertimes2006-12-19SW
4843Climate Change has Surprising Effect on Endangered Naked Carp; 'Metabolic Holiday'Underwatertimes2006-12-19US
4844Snakeheads Appear at Home in the Potomacwashington post2006-10-02US
4845Farming endangered blue-fin tuna bbc news2006-12-27JP
4846World First as Endangered Fish Population Recovers; Shortnose Sturgeon Numbers Up 400%Underwatertimes2007-02-06US
4847Chips plan to keep an eye on fishbbc news2006-10-16CA
4848Scientists: First Documented Spawning of White Fish in the Detroit River Since 1900sunderwatertimes2006-10-17US
4849Study: Critical Nutrients in Ecosystems Change when Fish Become Extinctunderwatertimes2007-03-27CA
4850'No debate' that fish farms kill wild salmon, says B.C. scientistCBC News2006-10-20CA

219 220 221 193 of [222 - pages.]