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Nature Conservancy Buys Fishing Permit for Port Clyde Sector |
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A conservation advocacy group hopes to persuade many more of Maine's groundfishermen to join a program which it says is designed to help secure sustainable fish populations and fishing communities. And, as Tom Porter reports, it hopes to do this be offering them more fish to catch.
The Nature Conservancy in Maine, which is based in Brunswick, began the week by announcing the purchase of a new federal groundfish permit to be made available to fishermen in the Port Clyde Sector: This stretches from mid-coast Maine down to Biddeford and includes about 25 boats. That's about 40 percent of all Maine groundfishing activity. Read or listen to the complete story from the MPBN.
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Monterey Bay's historic "wetfish" industry is under attack by extremist groups who claim overfishing is occurring. Touting studies with faulty calculations, activists are lobbying federal regulators to massively limit fishing, if not ban these fisheries outright. Apparently the facts don’t matter to groups with an anti-fishing agenda






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