Fishing Nations Approve Overhaul Of Bluefin Tuna Tracking System 
By Kate Willson JP Source: njtoday 11/21/2011

Nearly 50 countries that trade in high-priced Eastern Atlantic Bluefin Tuna agreed Saturday to transform an archaic paper-based method for tracking fish into a digitalized system that officials say will make it harder for fleets to smuggle plundered bluefin into market.

Member countries of the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), the body charged with protecting the bluefin stocks threatened by overfishing, will implement the new electronic system by the time ships set out in the spring of 2013.
 

Last year, the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) exposed the paper-based Bluefin Catch Document schemeas so full of holes as to render it virtually useless. The system was riddled with inaccuracies and inconsistencies and did little to stop the thriving black market in bluefin. Before the ICIJ report, officials had lauded the system as a successful deterrent to illegal trade — a way to track every fish from hook, through fattening farms and to the final buyer.

Bluefin tuna is one of the sea’s most valuable species, a highly migratory fish that can weigh more than 500 kilograms (more than 1,102 pounds) and live 40 years. One large fish can fetch more than $100,000 in Japan, which consumes around 80 percent of the global bluefin market. The fish has been widely hunted in the Mediterranean. As a result, the spawning stock has plummeted by nearly 75 percent over the past five decades.

 
Atlantic bluefin tuna Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4951Sweeping reforms to West Coast fisheries recommendedvancouver news2019-05-09CA
4952Huge ‘Prehistoric’ Alligator Gar Caught in Oklahoma’s Lake TexomaNewsWeek2019-04-23US
4953Pimp my shack: Luxury ice fishing a growing trend in AlbertaCBC News2019-02-16CA
4954Alberta Cree man successfully challenges illegal fishing ticketCBC News2018-10-03CA
4955Fish fall from sky with rain in northern MexicoAssociated Press2019-05-06MX
4956B.C. salmon fishing guides fear for livelihoods amid fishery closurevancouver sun2019-05-04CA
4957'This is all optical': Sport fishers slam DFO's chinook closuresCBC News 2019-05-01CA
4958Fisheries audit B.C. fish processor after reports of illegal fish barteringnational post2019-05-03CA
4959Russia learning to live with less pollockseafoodsource2019-05-01RU
4960Canada closer to allowing Asian carp as lobster bait, depending on test outcomesCBC News2019-04-29CA
4961They’re biting at this Peterborough fishing derbythe peterborough examiner2019-04-27CA
4962Fishing derbies feel sting of new salmon rulessooke news mirror2019-04-26CA
4963Freshwater fish species richness has increased in Ohio River Basin since '60sPLOS2019-04-24US
4964Small fish, big goalshouston-today2019-04-24CA
4965Comox Valley fishing charters feel pinch of restrictionscomoxvalleyrecord2019-04-22CA
4966Former pulp mill town ground zero in Nova Scotia fish farms debateCBC News 2019-04-17CA
4967Government of Canada takes action to address Fraser River Chinook declineFisheries and Oceans Canada2019-04-16CA
4968New Fisheries Act could mark a turning point for Canada’s depleted fisheriesHill Times2019-04-15CA
4969Estonia warns anglers off thin iceBBC Monitoring2019-03-19ES
4970Kenora based angler Jeff Gustafson joins BassmasterCBC News2019-02-07US
49712019 Lake Erie fishing outlook is great news for anglersOther News2019-04-12US
4972Atlantic mackerel stocks down 86% over past 20 years, says new DFO reportCBC News2019-04-10CA
4973Environment Canada approves genetically-modified salmon raised in P.E.I.THE CANADIAN PRESS2019-04-11CA
4974Governments of Canada and Nova Scotia fund projects to boost innovation and productivity in the fish and seafood sectorFisheries and Oceans Canada, Maritimes Region2019-04-10CA
4975Scientists are split on whether a virus is killing B.C.’s salmonStar Vancouver2019-04-06CA

197 198 199 198 of [200 - pages.]