OPINION: To stop overfishing of tuna, ban foreign sales of bluefins
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Bluefin tuna is the great money fish of the Atlantic, but overfishing by the
countries bordering the Mediterranean Sea threatens to cause a complete
collapse of the stock. The United States should take the lead in
stopping international trade of this fish.
Eighty percent of the catch of
Atlantic bluefin tuna goes to Japan, where it is prized for sushi.
Recently, one fish sold for $177,000 at a Japanese auction. The two
main options for keeping the catch at a sustainable level include the
current approach - a system of annual quotas set by the International
Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas - and a proposed ban
on international sales of the bluefin as an endangered species.
Conservation
advocates say Mediterranean fishermen have routinely exceeded the
quotas with impunity. They favor a ban on international sales to drive
down the value of the fish and give the species a chance to rebound
over five to 10 years. Scientists say current numbers of the fish are
less than 20 percent of what they were in the 1970s.
Read the complete story at The Boston Globe.
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