Azerbaijan: Sturgeon Poachers Out of Control 
AZ Source: Sabuhi Nasirli 5/17/2007
Azerbaijan: Sturgeon Poachers Out of Control
When a south wind blows from the Caspian Sea towards the coastal village of Hovsan, 32 kilometers (20 miles) east of the Azerbaijani capital of Baku, hundreds of dead fish are washed ashore.

The fish are the victims of illegal poachers and indiscriminate methods of killing their prey that are threatening stocks of sturgeon, an endangered species and the most precious resource of the Caspian.

In spring, all kinds of fish swim for shallow waters in order to spawn caviar in warmer waters. Here they fall prey to illegal explosives used by the poachers.

Along the shoreline you can meet amateur fishermen with rods but also men who are evidently poachers getting ready to lay explosive charges.
 

he ordinary fishermen say that for the last 10 years poachers have been catching fish on this spot, mostly unhindered and using dynamite or homemade explosives made of fertilizers. They go out fishing in motorboats either early in the morning or late at night.

Fishing is one of the most lucrative businesses in modern day Azerbaijan. On the black market, a kilo of fresh sturgeon can be bought for 10 manats (US$12) while a kilo of black caviar costs around 120 manats (US$140). Overseas, these prices can be dozens of times higher.

International alarm about a steep decline in sturgeon stocks prompted the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, CITES, to halt exports of Beluga caviar from the Caspian Sea in 2006.

CITES lifted the ban in 2007, prompting objections from many environmentalists. One of them, Dr. Ellen Pikitch, co-founder of the organization Caviar Emptor, which monitors the caviar trade, called the decision a "death sentence," maintaining that the Beluga sturgeon has lost more than 90 percent of its population in recent years.

The Caspian Fish Company has a monopoly over most fishing in the Azerbaijani sector of the sea, but it appears powerless to rein in the poachers.

 
Sturgeon Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
3826Why are bluefin tuna going hungry in a sea full of fish?upi2015-06-22US
3827Spectators Flock To Lock Before Carp Force Permanent ClosureMinneapolis News2015-06-09US
3828Many people think women can't fishdailymail2015-06-08NZ
3829Strange fish fall from the sky in AlaskaCNN Wire2015-06-05US
3830Angler Erik Axner celebrates hauling in this enormous 2.1m halibut fishnews2015-06-04AU
3831Florida Angler Hooks Big Blue Catfish, State Record At 69 Poundsunderwatertimes2015-06-04US
3832Why are goldfish in garden ponds threatening frogs?telegraph2015-06-04UK
3833Sturgeon leaps from river, knocks Florida teen unconscioustulsaworld2015-06-03US
3834Rare 17-foot ‘sea monster’ washes ashore on Catalina Islandkhon22015-06-02US
3835The killer goldfish that can choke predators, walks on land and climbs TREES... and they're heading to Australia any day nowdailymail2015-06-01AU
3836As Caviar Prices Skyrocket, Sturgeon Poachers Invade Pacific Northwestnorthcountrypublicradio2015-06-01US
3837Swordfish kills fisherman who speared it during struggle in Hawaiitheguardian2015-05-30US
3838DEC changes stance: 'We do not ticket anglers for taking photos of fish'syracuse2019-03-22US
3839No fish tale: Klamath Falls couple finds ring 12 years after it was lostbluemountaineagle2015-06-10US
3840Salmon face extinction throughout the US west. Blame these four damstheguardian2015-06-09UK
3841Russia to Face Accusations, Fines if Extinction of Sturgeons Continuessputniknews2015-05-22RU
3842In the US Senate, Heated Debate over Catfishlearningenglish2015-05-21US
3843Harvesters raise alarm over appearance of red herring near Vale plantCBC News2015-05-14US
3844Monster fish pulls anglers’ boat mile down Mississippi before being landedPioneer Press2015-05-15US
38454m giant oarfish drifts on to Quang Binh’s coastvietnamnet2015-05-14VM
3846Utah couple catches monster tiger muskie on wedding anniversaryKSL.com2015-05-11US
3847Walleye at risk in Lake Erie dredge dumping debateThe Plain Dealer 2015-05-09US
3848How a 2-inch fish became more important than peopleOrange County Register2015-05-08US
3849Feds wrong to allow transfer of diseased salmon to fish farms in B.C., Federal Court rulesstraight2015-05-07CA
3850America Needs More Government Surveillance—On Fishwired2015-05-06US

219 220 221 153 of [222 - pages.]