FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE May 28, 2008
CONTACT: Ted Venker,
1-800-201-FISH
Bluefin on the Brink
HOUSTON, TX
– The Coastal Conservation Association Board of Directors is
calling for Atlantic harvest levels of bluefin tuna to be reduced to
levels supported by science and is urging the International
Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) to require
all member nations to adopt such quotas by emergency action.
If ICCAT refuses to
do so, CCA believes that the only alternative is a complete closure
of the Atlantic bluefin tuna fishery and an international
curtailment of trade. The call to action was outlined in a letter
from CCA National Chairman Walter W. Fondren III to Secretary of
Commerce Carlos M. Gutierrez and
Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne.
Many marine
scientists believe bluefin are on the verge of a stock collapse, and
there are indications here in the US that the stock has already
crashed,” said Robert G. Hayes, CCA general counsel. “Sometimes all
you are left with is the truth, and the painful truth now is that
nothing less than emergency action can reverse the years of
overfishing that resulted from exceeding quotas that in themselves
were set too high.
Tuna range
throughout the Atlantic from the Mediterranean Sea to the Gulf of
Mexico. As one of the most valuable fish in the sea, bluefin tuna
are targeted throughout their range by the fishing fleets of many
nations while fishery managers on either side of the Atlantic have
been unable or unwilling to agree on an effective recovery plan.
Catches from the eastern stock of bluefin, spawned in the
Mediterranean, have exceeded scientific advice by almost 400 percent
for at least the last five years. Rebuilding plans for the western
stock, spawned in the Gulf of Mexico, have also been a complete
failure, with the U.S. unable to catch its quota for the past three
years
“The focus
has been on the business side of this fishery for far too long and
greed has been the driving force in its management,” said Charles
Witek, vice chairman of CCA’s National Government Relations
Committee. “CCA has long known that focusing on anything other than
the health of the resource is the first step to ensuring its demise.
Bluefin are another tragic example of what happens when you put
business and fishermen first.
The
moratorium would have to be adopted by the member nations of ICCAT,
a United Nations chartered fishery organization responsible for the
conservation of such recreationally and commercially important
species as tuna, swordfish and marlin in the Atlantic Ocean and
adjacent seas. The organization was established by treaty in 1969
and is the only organization that can undertake the range of work
required for the study and management of tunas and other key
migratory species in the Atlantic.
“As is so
often the case, the American fisherman is not responsible for
driving bluefin tuna to the brink of collapse, but they are going to
have to be a part of the solution to salvage what is left,” said Dr.
Russell Nelson, CCA’s Gulf fisheries consultant.
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