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Fishermen have mixed thoughts on increased groundfish monitoring

September 28, 2020 โ€” After returning home for a hot meal and quick snooze following three days alone at sea, Randy Cushman wakes up at 3:30 a.m. to begin the final steps of his fish and data processing in the sleepy, pine-lined fishing village of Port Clyde.

Cushman took his first two-day groundfishing trip out of this harbor with his father when he was five years old. Now, over 40 years later, Cushman counts and prepares fish all morning with his wife โ€” who is also his business partner โ€” to get hundreds of pounds of fish ready for local markets.

Once the fish are sorted, Cushmanโ€™s final step is to mail a hard drive containing video of what he caught and discarded during his trip for review. Cushmanโ€™s 50-foot boat โ€” the Ella Christine โ€” was one of the three Maine vessels that six years ago spearheaded whatโ€™s been the longest electronic monitoring project in New England.

The project, designed to prevent overfishing in the regionโ€™s waters, includes more than 30 boats across New England. It was born from a collaboration between the Maine Coast Fishermenโ€™s Association, The Nature Conservancy, the Gulf of Maine Research Institute and Ecotrust Canada. It allows fishermen to use cameras strapped to their ships to track landings and discards, instead of human observers.

Read the full story at the Penobscot Bay Pilot

Drug trafficking could be putting โ€˜fragile fisheriesโ€™ at risk, study says

July 6, 2020 โ€” The fishing boat flew a Singaporean flag as it sailed toward Batam Island in Indonesia. But when Indonesian Navy officers intercepted the vessel and boarded it in February 2018, they discovered that the boat, and its four-person crew, were actually from Taiwan. Flying a false flag wasnโ€™t the only offense โ€” customs officials also found 41 rice sacks packed with a ton of methamphetamine, or crystal meth, hidden beneath food supplies in the vesselโ€™s hold.

The use of fishing vessels to transport drugs is a fairly common occurrence, according to a new study published in Fish and Fisheries. In fact, the study found that drug trafficking on fishing vessels has actually tripled over the last eight years, accounting for about 15% of the global retail value of illicit drugs.

Dyhia Belhabib, the paperโ€™s lead author as well as the principal fisheries investigator at Ecotrust Canada and founder of Spyglass, an online tool that maps out vessels involved in maritime crimes, said thereโ€™s actually a distinct lack of data on drug trafficking in the fisheries sector. This study aimed to bridge that gap.

To investigate the relationship between the drug trade and global fisheries, Belhabib and her co-researchers gathered all of the available data on 292 reported global cases between 2010 and 2017, and used estimation techniques to fill in any missing information. For instance, when they had the amount of drugs, but not the price, they calculated prices based on data on the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) database.

Read the full story at Mongabay

New tool helps fisheries enforcement track criminal fishing around the world

November 19, 2019 โ€” A new online tool maps vessels that have fished illegally or committed other crimes at sea, giving fishery managers and enforcement officials another way to keep tabs on illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing.

Spyglass, which contains records for nearly 3,700 vessels and 1,200 companies so far, aims to document which vessels are the highest risk for IUU fishing so that they can be stopped.

Read the full story at Seafood Source

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