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| More than 50 fishing nations meet this week in Majorca to try and agree quotas for the under-pressure bigeye tuna (AFP Photo/JOHN WESSELS) |
Paris (AFP) - The fate of big-eye tuna, over-fished and in decline, could be decided this week when fishing nations meet to set quotas after failing last year to agree on safeguard measures for the valuable food resource.
Scientists
warn that unless the catch is reduced, stocks of Thunnus obesus -- prized for
sashimi in Japan and canned worldwide -- could collapse within years.
A
scientific report prepared for last year's meeting of the International
Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) showed that numbers
had plummeted to less than 20 percent of historic levels.
This was
only about half what is needed to support a "maximum sustainable
yield" -- the largest catch that can be taken without compromising the
long-term stability of a species.
ICCAT,
which groups more than 50 parties including the European Union, convenes in
Majorca, Spain, on Monday for another review of the situation in the Atlantic
and the Mediterranean, having failed last year to agree quotas or how to
include all members in the system.
Previously,
ICCAT has a headline quota of 65,000 tonnes, but in practice the catch was
nearer to 80,000 tonnes, well into the danger zone, according to NGOs.
The EU on
Monday proposed a quota of 62,500 tonnes through to 2022 which would include 17
countries currently catching more than 1,250 tonnes a year.
Ivory
Coast, Gabon, Ghana and Guinea Bissau, meanwhile, back a quota of 57,500 to
60,000 tonnes, while the Latin American states of Costa Rica, El Salvador,
Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama and Mexico are pressing for no change.
Quota key
to recovery
For the Pew
Charitable Trusts, "a quota of 60,000 tonnes would be too high,"
fisheries expert Grantly Galland told AFP, suggesting 50,000 tonnes instead.
A quota of
60,000 tonnes would make the stock recovery period "too long,"
Galland said.
Some
experts have calculated that cutting the total catch to 50,000 tonnes per year
would give bigeye tuna a 70 percent chance of recovery by 2028.
ICCAT will
also be looking at other species at risk -- albacore tuna and sharks.
For
albacore, it suggests a quota of 110,000 tonnes from 2020.
For its
part, the World Wide Fund for Nature recommends that no-go zones be established
for certain periods so as to reduce the number of juvenile tuna caught.
The
International Pole and Line Foundation (IPNLF), which promotes artisanal line
fishing for tuna, wants the meeting to take on board the special concerns of
developing coastal countries.
As for
sharks, which have suffered massive human predation, Senegal is pushing for all
shortfin mako sharks caught to be released, dead or alive.
The
shortfin mako, also known as the blue pointer or bonito shark, is among the
most at risk and is already protected under international trade by the wild
fauna and flora CITES convention aimed at controlling trafficking in endangered
species.

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