Would you quit your job for $110,000? This California swordfish catcher said no 
By Louis Sahagún US Source: latimes 10/15/2021
Louis Sahagún
As the morning fog peeled off the docks of Santa Barbara Harbor recently, fisherman Gary Burke eyed all that’s left of a fleet that once helped satisfy America’s insatiable appetite for swordfish: four old vessels with splotches of rust showing through peeling paint.

Decades ago, there were more than 100 such ships in Santa Barbara alone, towing mile-long drift gill nets in choppy seas far beyond the breakwater. Today, there are perhaps a dozen in the entire United States, and they will probably soon be removed from service.
 

Hammered by government regulations, foreign competition, soaring fuel and labor costs, fluctuating market prices, a state buy-back program to take nets out of the water, and conflicts with preservationists over incidental entanglements of whales, porpoises, seals, turtles and birds, Burke’s livelihood has gone the way of Southern California fur trappers and dairy farms.

As if all that weren’t enough, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency have issued an advisory warning that swordfish are not safe to eat because they contain high levels of mercury.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
1226New treaty to protect the world’s oceans may hurt vulnerable African fisheriesthe conversation2023-10-11US
1227Tiny creature with ‘ruffled’ genitalia discovered as new species in Indonesiamiamiherald2023-10-12ID
1228Michigan anglers can again catch Arctic graylingbridgemi2023-10-12US
1229Mystery of 200-pound bluefin tuna washed up on Orcas Islandmynorthwest2023-10-09US
1230Ghoulish footballfish makes rare appearance on Orange County beachlatimes2023-10-21US
1231Alligator gar caught in Texas weighing 283 pounds shatters multiple recordsFox News2023-10-25US
1232From kingfish to insects: insights from the €200 m ocean impact fundthefishsite2023-10-25BZ
1233Сом в шляпеohotniki2023-10-23RU
1234Japanese Method of Humane Fish Killing Improves Quality and FlavorecoRI News2023-10-12JP
1235The return of an old scourge reveals a deep sickness in the global fishing industrybostonglobe2023-10-12CN
1236Artist expresses depths of grief, then healing, in eye-catching paintings of fishnola2023-10-13US
1237First ever bluefin tuna found in Salish Sea stumps local marine expertsKOMO News2023-10-14US
1238Leading UK chefs join campaign to cast farmed salmon off menutheguardian2023-10-14UK
1239Osakis fisherman loses runaway walleye during photo opechopress2023-10-20CA
1240Plan for water cuts from 3 Western states is enough to protect Colorado RiverThe Associated Press2023-10-25US
1241Tsleil-Waututh’s race to save salmon habitat in drought stricken southwest B.C.coastalnewstoday2023-10-20CA
1242Alleged salmon price-fixing scheme prompts $5.2M Canadian settlementvancouverisawesome2023-10-20CA
1243The Ausable River's fish died in droves in July.CBC News2023-10-12CA
1244Reaping the rewards of a move from agri- to aqua-culturethefishsite2023-10-20IN
1245‘It smells so bad’: glut of wild salmon creates stink in Norway and Finlandtheguardian2023-10-02UK
1246Estonia's national fish stock fell by half even while adhering to quotaerr2023-10-04EE
1247Invasive spiny water flea found in Lake Winnipesaukee for first time evermasslive2023-10-01US
1248Fisherman loses runaway walleye during photo op and makes miraculous catchechopress2023-10-20US
1249Illegal fishing plagues Omani coastal citiesmuscatdaily2023-10-07OM
1250A young leader fights for Yukon River salmon, her community – and herselfalaskapublic2023-10-03US

215 216 217 49 of [218 - pages.]