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Regulators to decide whether to keep Maine shrimp ban

December 7, 2015 โ€” PORTSMOUTH, New Hampshire โ€“ Fishing regulators are ready to decide if a moratorium on fishing for Maine shrimp will be extended into next year.

Fishermen havenโ€™t been able to catch the shrimp since 2013. The Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commissionโ€™s Northern Shrimp Section is scheduled to meet on Monday in Portsmouth to decide if that will continue.

The commissionโ€™s Northern Shrimp Technical Committee says prospects for shrimp recovery are poor for the near future. It is asking the Northern Shrimp Section to extend the moratorium.

Read the full story at the Portland Press Herald

 

Arctic Nations Seek to Prevent Exploitation of Fisheries in Opening Northern Waters

November 24, 2015 โ€” Ruth Teichroeb, the communications officer for Oceans North: Protecting Life in the Arctic, an initiative of the Pew Charitable Trusts, sent a note this evening about new steps related to an issue Iโ€™ve covered here before โ€“ the rare and welcome proactive work by Arctic nations to ban fishing in the central Arctic Ocean ahead of the โ€œbig meltโ€ as summer sea ice retreats more in summers in a human-heated climate.

Given how little is known about the Arctic Oceanโ€™s ecology and dynamics, this is a vital and appropriate step.

Hereโ€™s her note about an important meeting in Washington in early December, which will likely be obscured as the climate treaty negotiations in Paris enter their final week at the same time:

The United States is hosting negotiations for an international Arctic fisheries agreement to protect the Central Arctic Ocean in Washington, D.C., on December 1 to 3. The five Arctic countries will meet for the first time with non-Arctic fishing nations to work on a binding international accord. This follows the declaration of intent signed in July by the Arctic countries.

The big question for this meeting is whether China, Japan, Korea and the European Union will attend and cooperate on a precautionary agreement to prevent overfishing given the dramatic impact of climate change in the Arctic.

Read the full story at The New York Times

Fishing Quotas Proposed for Atlantic and North Sea

November 11, 2015 โ€” The Commission proposes to maintain or increase the fish quotas for 35 stocks, and reduce catches for 28 stocks on the basis of the scientific advice received.

Some of the stocks facing increases include megrim in the North Sea and West of Scotland and horse mackerel in Northern Spain.

Due to a lack of improvement, stocks with cuts include Celtic Sea and English Channel cod and haddock by up to almost 30 per cent and 27 per cent respectively.

The Irish Sea sole fishery has a huge proposed cut of 100 per cent which would effectively close the fishery, said Europรชche.

The Commission has also proposed a complete ban on the fishing of sea bass from 1 January to 30 June and a limitation to 1000kg per vessel per month in some areas only from 1 July.

Quota Top Ups

The EC is also proposing an increase in fishing opportunities to help fishermen in the transition to the new obligation to land all catches. This is the first time the Commission proposes so-called quota โ€œtop upsโ€ for all the fisheries under the landing obligation as of 2016.

This extra quota aims to compensate fishermen for the extra fish they will have to land. On the basis of scientific advice to be received by mid-November the Commission will, later in the month, propose the catch increase including all the quantities that need to be landed.

Read the full story at The Fish Site

Fish Success Story: Cod Makes a Comeback

October 27, 2015 โ€” The cod is coming back.

The species that was for centuries a mainstay of the American and Canadian economies had virtually vanished off the Northeastern North American coast by the 1990s owing to overfishing. That led regulators in 1992 to impose a moratorium on cod fishing.

It appears to have worked.

New research shows that cod biomass has increased from the tens of tons to more than 200,000 tons within the last decade. This spring, scientists documented large increases in cod abundance and size for the first time since the moratorium in the more northerly spawning groups, according to a study published Monday in the Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences.

โ€œCod was historically one of the most important fish stocks in the world,โ€ said George Rose, director of the Center for Fisheries Ecosystems Research at the University of Newfoundland in Canada and author of the new report on the codโ€™s recovery. โ€œWhen the stocks collapsed in the 1990s, it became the icon of all the bad things we are doing to the ocean, and in many ways, it changed how we deal with our oceans worldwide.โ€

Read the full story at TakePart

Oceana celebrates fishing ban in Danish marine parks

October 15, 2015 โ€” The Chamber of Jigger Owners from Argentina (CAPA) decided to carry out a symbolic protest at the local port due to the serious economic and competitive challenges faced by the sector.

The lights remained lit in the boats between 8 pm and 10 pm. โ€œJiggers do not want to turn off the lights,โ€ is the slogan chosen by the chamber.

โ€œWe are going through a terrible crisis due to currency exchange issues, soaring domestic costs and the increase in the theft of our resources in the Mile 201 by foreign fleets offering their products at a lower selling price than we do,โ€ representatives of the sector claimed.

Read the full story at FIS World News

 

Bottom fishing banned in Danish marine parks

October 7, 2015 โ€” Denmark, Germany and Sweden will stop all fishing activities over highly sensitive โ€˜bubblingโ€™ reefs and will also end fishing with damaging bottom gear over reefs in protected Danish waters of the Baltic Sea and Kattegat.

This follows a new EU regulation โ€“ jointly recommended by Denmark, Germany and Sweden โ€“ which bans fishing activities in 10 Natura 2000 protected sites, although the fisheries restrictions only apply to specific reef zones within these areas.

Read the full story at World Fishing & Aquaculture

U.S. court upholds California ban on shark fins

July 27, 2015 โ€” SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. โ€” A federal appeals court upheld Californiaโ€™s ban on possession or sale of shark fins Monday, rejecting a challenge by Bay Area suppliers and sellers of shark fin soup, a traditional dish in the Chinese American community.

The law prohibited selling and serving shark fin soup when it took effect in July 2013. Opponents, including restaurants, Chinese American community organizations and shark fin suppliers, argued that the law exceeded the stateโ€™s authority and interfered with a commercial fishing market that federal regulations were intended to preserve. Federal laws prohibit shark โ€œfinning,โ€ the removal of fins from live sharks, but do not forbid possessing or selling shark fins.

But the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco said federal laws on shark fishing recognize the importance of conservation and allow states to adopt their own protective measures, even if they reduce the number of sharks that might otherwise be caught and sold.

โ€œThe purpose of the shark fin law is to conserve state resources, prevent animal cruelty, and protect wildlife and public health,โ€ said Judge Andrew Hurwitz in the 2-1 ruling, which upheld a federal judgeโ€™s decision in the stateโ€™s favor.

Read the full story at San Francisco Chronicle

 

Sea Warming Leads to Ban on Fishing in the Arctic

July 16, 2015 โ€” WASHINGTON โ€” The United States and four other nations that border the Arctic Ocean pledged on Thursday to prohibit commercial fishing in the international waters of the Arctic until more scientific research could be done on how warming seas and melting ice are affecting fish stocks.

The agreement came as an annual report on the worldโ€™s climate โ€” released by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the American Meteorological Society โ€” said that temperatures on the ocean surface reached the highest levels in 135 years of record keeping.

The oceanโ€™s rising temperature, which was particularly acute in the Northern Pacific last year, has drawn fish stocks farther north. That development, along with the shrinking levels of ice, has raised the prospect of industrial-scale fishing in the once-inaccessible Arctic.

โ€œClimate change is affecting the migration patterns of fish stocks,โ€Norwayโ€™s foreign minister, Borge Brende, said in a statement after the declaration was signed in Oslo, the Norwegian capital. He said that Norway and the other coastal states in the Arctic โ€” Canada, Denmark (on behalf of its territory of Greenland), Russia and the United States โ€” had a โ€œparticular responsibilityโ€ to regulate fishing that is likely to occur there.

Read the full story at The New York Times

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