Deadliest catch: Thailand's 'ghost' fishing nets help COVID fight 
By AFP and Dene-Hern Chen, Pitcha Dangprasith TH Source: manilastandard 1/24/2021
AFP and Dene-Hern Chen, Pitcha Dangprasith
Underwater divers in plastic-choked waters off the coast of Thailand snip through discarded nets tangled around a reef—a new initiative helping protect marine life and aiding the fight against coronavirus.
The "ghost nets" discarded from the country's lucrative fishing industry are a deadly source of plastic pollution, ensnaring turtles and cutting into delicate coral beds.

Left unattended, "they could stay adrift for decades, either entrapping or becoming the food of marine animals," says Ingpat Pakchairatchakul of the London-based Environmental Justice Foundation.
 

Ingpat was speaking to AFP during a recent boat trip off the coast of Chonburi province, as a team of more than 30 divers hacked away at stubborn threads enveloping a reef 27 metres (90 feet) below the vessel.

She is part of Net Free Seas, a project that fetches used nets and turns them into new plastic products -- in this case meeting the burgeoning demand for protective gear like face shields to guard against the pandemic.

It aims to prove that protecting sea creatures can be commercially viable in Thailand, one of the world's biggest producers of ocean waste.

The initiative also comes in the wake of a growing local outcry over the lethal effects of plastic on marine life.

In one infamous example, a sick baby dugong named Mariam washed up in shallow waters two years ago and later died from an infection caused by plastic lining its stomach.

It prompted an online outpouring of grief among Thais who had spent months watching a live web broadcast of rescuers trying to nurse the creature back to health.

Mariam was among the nearly two dozen dead or injured large marine animals found beached on Thailand's shores each year, according to Chaturathep Khowinthawong, the director of the kingdom's marine park management agency.

"More than 70 percent of them are injured from the ghost nets and have cuts deep into their bodies," he says.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
3926Fishing or Fish Farming: Which Is More Responsible?treehugger2017-06-05NL
3927You might think you know your pet goldfish, but its origins and biology are stranger than you ever guessedbbc2014-10-21CN
3928Photos capture the quadrennial phenomenon as millions of salmon jam B.C.'s Adams riverthe globe and mail2014-10-20CA
3929Whole Foods Pushes Consumption, Conservation Of Paichesanfrancisco2014-10-16US
3930No new fisheries in the Arctic following federal banCTV News2014-10-17CA
3931Angler baked, ate record-breaking fishdelaware online2014-10-09US
3932Fish Colon Offers Insight Into Evolutionuniversity herald2014-10-08US
3933Pacific Island nations secure $90m tuna deal with United Statesabc2014-10-08US
3934Did Three Anglers Release the Largest Tarpon Ever Caught on Rod-and-Reel?sportfishingmag2014-10-06NI
3935Texas man sets world record after catching rare hybrid fishFox News2021-05-25US
3936Where did all the salmon go? An old orca has seen a lot of changes in more than 90 yearsseattletimes2021-05-30US
3937Non-kosher fish eaten in Jerusalem during early days of Judaismnewscientist2014-09-25IL
3938Can Electric Fish Talk Like Obama?theatlantic2021-05-26US
3939How a Frenzy for Echinoderms Exposed and Entrenched Inequities in a Fishing Communityhakaimagazine2021-05-27PW
394012-year-old fisherman wins $15K for catching 26-pound fish in New Yorkfoxnews2021-05-18US
3941Blind cavefish ditches circadian rhythm to save energyABC2014-09-25NZ
3942Chefs told to cut wild salmon from menusheraldscotland2014-09-23UK
3943China, US seek ways to benefit from carpChina Daily2014-09-23CN
39442 Marshall County men sentenced to 30 days in jail for cheating in bass-fishing tournamental2014-09-16US
3945Farmed salmon has 'more fat than pizza'independent2014-09-14IE
3946The Gulf of Alaska is unusually warm, and weird fish are showing upwashingtonpost2014-09-15US
3947Salmon found in upper Elwha River for first time in more than 100 yearsq13fox2014-09-13US
3948Teenage 'Fish Whisperer' catches bass from the SEWERdailymail2014-08-29UK
3949To study evolution, scientists raise fish to walk on landcsmonitor2014-08-28US
3950Experimental ‘fish fence’ used to fight Asian Carp invasion of Tennessee waterswreg2021-05-17US

219 220 221 157 of [222 - pages.]