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
4076Record rockfish was 64 years old, not 200, tests showspokesman2013-07-06US
4077Trouts under threat as deadly pesticide devastates top fishing riverexpress2013-07-05UK
4078In Northern Minnesota, 37-inch pike found dead with 3-pound sucker stuck in jawstwincities2013-07-04CA
4079Ancient rockfish caught in Alaska: Why nobody threw it backlatimes2013-07-03US
4080Growing coldAntarctic Sun2013-07-05US
4081Fish in Louisiana lake left covered in sores and blisters after parasite attackDaily Mail2013-06-26US
4082Bubble-eyed goldfish has to swim on his own in case he bumps into others and BURSTS his eyesdailymail2013-06-26UK
4083Hydromea unveils the world’s first wireless compact underwater drone 2021-05-17CH
4084This underwater hut acts as a nursery to help the renewal of marine species in the Mediterraneanmalaymail2021-04-26MC
4085A singing fish: it glows green during courtship and looks like Boris Johnson’s hardship facetheguardian2021-04-27LK
4086Stinging scorpion fish among 10 ‘uncommon species’ recently found in Florida watersmiamiherald2021-04-28US
4087The scale of fish waste sent to landfill could feed a communitystuff2021-04-30NZ
4088Asian carp spawn in more areas than 1st thoughtCBC News2013-06-24CA
4089Eklutna, Snettisham hydro projects still haven't redressed fish and wildlife damagesadn2017-12-02US
4090How Igor The Amazonian Pacu Fish Found A Place Called Homewlrn2013-06-20US
4091Man gets jail for cheating in fishing tournamentbemidjipioneer2013-06-18US
4092Former cheerleader, 19, becomes the first woman to win competition where hopefuls catch catfish with their BARE HANDSdailymail2013-06-25UK
4093Mysterious photo surfaces, purportedly of record largemouth bass caught in 1932Fox News2015-11-30US
4094Sturgeons Evolving At Rapid Paceunderwatertimes2013-06-07CA
4095Robotic Navigation Tech Will Explore the Deep OceanNASA2021-05-14US
4096Fish killed after more than a million gallons of drinking water spills into Comal RiverThe Herald-Zeitung2021-04-29DE
4097Halifax company growing fish food from greenhouse gases gets funding boostCBC News2021-05-03CA
4098Fish With Parasites Attached To Their Heads Have Advantage Over Predatorsunderwatertimes2013-06-03AU
4099Climate Change Could Decimate California's Native Fishkqed2013-05-31US
4100Manitoba fish co-op fined for illegally selling to U.S.CBC News2013-05-27CA

219 220 221 163 of [222 - pages.]