Billions
of pounds of sea life
die every year to feed our
seafood appetite
20
March, 2014
For
every pound of sashimi, barbecued shrimp, or grilled sea bass that
you stuff into your mouth, you’re basically spitting four ounces of
marine life onto the floor.
The
nonprofit Oceana published a
detailed report on
Thursday cataloguing the egregious problem of bycatch in U.S.
fisheries. Bycatch is a word that refers to the sharks, turtles,
whales, non-edible fish, and other critters that are inadvertently
hauled into fishing boats or caught up in the gear of fishing fleets
that are pursuing more palatable and lucrative species.
Such
gratuitous killing wreaks havoc with marine food chains that are
needed to support sustainable fisheries. From Oceana’s new
report:
Bycatch is one of the biggest threats to the oceans and has contributed to overfishing and the dramatic decline of fish populations around the world. Commercial fisheries bring in approximately 160 billion pounds of marine catch around the world each year, which means almost 400 million pounds are caught every day. Recent estimates indicate as much as 40 percent of global catch is discarded overboard.
Based
in part on U.S. government studies, Oceana estimates that 17 to 22
percent of animal life captured by the American fishing industry is
discarded back into the sea — “likely already dead or dying.”
If that’s accurate, some 2 billion pounds of marine wildlife is
inadvertently being maimed or killed by the U.S. fishing sector every
year.
The
problem is not well measured globally or in the U.S.:
Of
those American fisheries where bycatch is measured, nine
fisheries cause a lionfish’s share of the problem — they’re
responsible for half of the country’s reported bycatch but they
bring in just 7 percent of its landings.
Oceana
is calling for new regulations, the closing of loopholes in
existing regulations, vigorous enforcement of rules already on
the books, and better monitoring of bycatch. “Bycatch is not
inevitable,” the report states. “There are ways to minimize
unintended injury and waste by using cleaner gear, avoiding areas
where vulnerable species are known to be present and enforcing
bycatch limits each season.
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