April 18, 2018 — A bill before the House would ban the sale of shark fins — considered a delicacy in many Asian cultures — to stop the already illegal practice of shark finning.
Shark finning is the practice of catching sharks and cutting off their fins, often while the animal is still alive, then throwing the body of shark back into the ocean. The practice has been outlawed for 18 years in the U.S.
California Democratic Rep. Edward Royce authored the bill to ban fin sales and defended his proposal Tuesday before the House Subcommittee on Water, Power and Oceans — one of the six subcommittees under the Committee on Natural Resources.
“The bill does not prohibit shark fishing. The proposal builds on previous congressional action targeting the shark fin trade, and it mirrors similar state level bans.” GOP Rep. Edward Royce of California told the committee. “It makes an awful lot of sense economically.”
At the top of the food chain, sharks are often the predators of the predators — sharks defend fish lower on the food chain by killing others that hunt them. Fishermen catch the fish sharks indirectly save, fueling the fishing industry, Royce argued.
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