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finchaser
09-23-2010, 10:38 AM
Recreational Fishing Alliance Contact: Jim Hutchinson, Jr. / 888-564-6732
For Immediate Release September 23, 2010

CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL ABSURDITY SAYS "SHUT DOWN BLUEFIN!"
Enviros Go From Lead Tackle To Tuna In Latest National Fishing Ban Attempt


(9/23/2010) The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) has announced it will start an official review for Atlantic bluefin tuna under the Endangered Species Act (ESA). The decision to consider an ESA listing for bluefin is in response to a request by the Center for Biological Diversity, the same group now spearheading a national lead ban for fishermen.

According to the Center for Biological Diversity, as a result of the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico where many of the bluefin tuna caught in the western Atlantic Ocean spawn, bluefin tuna may be endangered in the future, which they say warrants an official ESA listing. According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which together with NMFS helps administer such rulings, ESA is defined as protecting endangered and threatened species and their habitats by prohibiting the "take" of listed animals, along with interstate or international trade.

Additionally, ESA defines 'take' as "to harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture, or collect or attempt to engage in any such conduct." Such a definitive listing would summarily eliminate the recreational catch and release fishery for Atlantic bluefin tuna, and could also impact other coastal fisheries where bluefin might be harassed, captured or harmed as a bycatch fishery.

Although news of an environmental organization trying to shut down another fishery has become fairly commonplace, the claim comes as a surprise to many recreational anglers who've seen large spreads of bluefin tuna up to 150 pounds from New England down through North Carolina in recent years. The New England charter boat industry has developed business for these fish because of their availability in inshore coastal waters during the summer, while a fairly robust fishery from New York to Virginia has existed for over a century, even though it's also significantly restricted as a result of stringent regulations. Despite strong regulatory controls, the recreational bluefin fishery is still a significant one.

"Recreational fishermen have enjoyed bluefin tuna fishing for more than a hundred years," said Jim Donofrio, Executive Director of the Recreational Fishing Alliance (RFA). "Bluefin have for a long time been the common man's big gamefish because they tend to be more accessible to near-shore areas than some of the tropical tunas such as yellowfin and bigeye," Donofrio added.

Although landings are down significantly because of federal regulations, Donofrio said there are still enough recreational fishermen participating in the fishery to contribute significantly from an economic and social standpoint, in terms of tackle sales, fuel sales, boat dockage and maintenance, charters and recreational fishing activity and enjoyment. As such, RFA intends to aggressively involve itself in the ESA review and in assuring that the recreational fishing community is protected.

"Although regulations have significantly reduced harvest and have all but eliminated the party boat industry from this fishery, it is still an important component of the recreational sector," Donofrio said, adding "if these fish are listed as endangered, which we do not believe they are, the recreational fishing industry will suffer another significant blow."

Donofrio said there is a strong body of evidence that bluefin are not endangered, explaining that while abuses in the Eastern Atlantic by the European nations have decimated stocks in violation of international treaties, the countries that fish in the West have strictly adhered to conservation principles. "We cannot allow this environmental group and others who support its efforts to take advantage of the Gulf environmental crisis when there is no evidence that it has impacted the health of this stock," he said.

In June, the RFA blasted the Center for Biological Diversity (http://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?llr=hclmspcab&et=1103711520973&s=10015&e=001rSFlHuKKJDFk4s4K3hUU8DHsBtZxuXBfWxALr8kBQXT_x QGhExVZjElqx5d-R5nYWhsJrTOAlZoS04Tpjd9hnUJoop7YgF3F5qTNDWG_L9w6UF MgsVN2RcdNcYQG0eYvZ-6dUp0evevgtRDQ1hh0MQ==)for using the Gulf tragedy to drum up national support for anti-fishing measures, noting that the real measures for addressing international overharvest of Atlantic bluefin should be through trade sanctions against offending nations. "The European Union (EU) has overfished their quotas for years, even subsidizing the expansion of their national bluefin tuna fleets," said Donofrio. "The EU keeps overfishing the stock, the Japanese keep buying up the illegal harvest, and here in the United States a well-financed environmental movement is punishing our American anglers."

RFA has openly lobbied for international trade sanctions against the EU for nearly a decade, and believes that if U.S. environmental groups were truly sincere about protecting bluefin tuna, they'd join the RFA in pressuring the Department of Commerce for increased compliance by foreign fleets instead of attacking American anglers.

"Too many people in the tackle and charter boat industry are talking about the phenomenal inshore bluefin fishery during the last few years which has really helped our East Coast anglers offset pretty significant losses suffered as a result of the overly stringent regulatory policies," said RFA managing director Jim Hutchinson, Jr.

"If U.S. anglers believed that bluefin tuna were endangered, we'd support taking necessary steps to assure the health of the stock," Hutchinson said. "We can't, however, ignore the significant evidence provided by fishermen along the East coast that the stocks are not endangered," he added.

Donofrio said the environmental activists responsible for this petition know full well that this action will have zero impact on international violators. "Just like their lead ban petition, they're showing absolutely no concern for America's fishermen or our coastal fishing communities," Donofrio said, adding "an ESA listing will only punish law-abiding U.S. citizens and a uniquely American industry, it will do nothing to protect the bluefin fishery."

"When government action, or proposal by an anti-fishing group, threatens the well-being of the recreational fishing communities, we will be there to aggressively fight it," Donofrio added.

DarkSkies
09-23-2010, 01:46 PM
Donofrio said the environmental activists responsible for this petition know full well that this action will have zero impact on international violators. "Just like their lead ban petition, they're showing absolutely no concern for America's fishermen or our coastal fishing communities," Donofrio said, adding "an ESA listing will only punish law-abiding U.S. citizens and a uniquely American industry, it will do nothing to protect the bluefin fishery."


Yup, go after the recs, and do nothing about the EU countries and the Gypsy Netters in S America and Africa targeting these tuna where they can't be monitored. And get a Pew-sponsored group to spearhead the legislation by pressing the ears of a few influential policymakers. :rolleyes:

Why do I sound so cynical about this? Politics as usual, with not many willing to sound off against it until it may be too late.

plugginpete
09-23-2010, 03:11 PM
Maybe they want to control it like a lottery, or with the rec permits going to bidders to cut the number of people rec fishing for tuna down? Either way I think it's wrong. Who are they to let an outside group decide?:2flip:

albiealert
09-23-2010, 03:44 PM
I don't fish for tuna, but it seems if they get their way we could one day have to pay a specific dollar amount for every species we catch, like a trout stamp.

captnemo
09-23-2010, 04:04 PM
Yup, go after the recs, and do nothing about the EU countries and the Gypsy Netters in S America and Africa targeting these tuna where they can't be monitored.

That's because when solving any problem that involves voters the public, they go for the low hanging fruit. It would not be cost-effective for them to pursue poachers in S African waters so they go after people that present an easy target.

finchaser
09-23-2010, 05:30 PM
Yup, go after the recs, and do nothing about the EU countries and the Gypsy Netters in S America and Africa targeting these tuna where they can't be monitored. And get a Pew-sponsored group to spearhead the legislation by pressing the ears of a few influential policymakers. :rolleyes:

Why do I sound so cynical about this? Politics as usual, with not many willing to sound off against it until it may be too late.


Let's not forget commercials support many of these assign groups:2flip: Obama and Lubichenco:2flip:

Pebbles
11-19-2010, 05:01 PM
(Reuters) - Fishing nations came under fresh pressure on Friday to cut Atlantic bluefin tuna quotas as negotiators got into the thick of annual wrangling over limits at talks in Paris.

With widespread uncertainty over how many fish are left to be caught, the United States urged a lower quota than last year and Japan (http://www.reuters.com/places/japan) called for a crackdown on unreported fishing which environmental groups say is rampant.

"When there is uncertainty in science we believe that it is important to err on the side of caution," U.S. Under Secretary of Commerce for Oceans and Atmosphere Jane Lubchenco told Reuters at the meeting of the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) in Paris.

"We believe that it is appropriate therefore to seek lower TACs (total allowable catches) for bluefin tuna for both sides of the Atlantic," she said.

The 48-member ICCAT, based in Madrid, meets every year to fix annual quotas for the giant fish popular with sushi-lovers. Talks started on Wednesday but were focused mainly on technical issues.

The European Union's position on quotas this year is unclear after EU ambassadors for
Prized by fishermen, Atlantic bluefin can grow to the size of a horse and fetch as much as $100,000 in markets like Japan, but their stocks have plunged by more than 80 percent since 1970s, according to western scientists.

ICCAT set an overall quota for 2010 of 13,500 tonnes of fish, which its scientific advisors said offered at least a 60 percent probability of rebuilding stocks by 2022.
PRECAUTIONARY APPROACH ICCAT chairman Fabio Hazin said on Friday that in light of uncertainty over the size of stocks, due in part to illegal fishing, members should "apply the precautionary approach by setting a TAC that would take these factors into full account."

The warm-blooded bluefin tuna can weigh up to 650 kg (1,433 lb) and is found in the north Atlantic, the Gulf of Mexico (http://www.reuters.com/subjects/gulf-oil-spill) and the Mediterranean, where captured fish are fattened in enclosures.

France, Italy (http://www.reuters.com/places/italy) and Spain catch most of the Atlantic bluefin consumed in the world and 80 percent of the haul goes to Japan.

Before EU members rejected its conservation plan, the European Commission had said a limit of 6,000 tonnes was needed for 2011 to give the fish a real chance of recovery, but it acknowledged that would be tough for fishermen.

"The decisions we have to take can sometimes be very hard for the fishing industry to accept," the head of the EU delegation, Pierre Amilhat, told the ICCAT conference.
Japan's delegation proposed that fishermen be forced to come up with plans for respecting quotas and that that they would have to get ICCAT's backing before they could fish.

Conservation groups are out in force at the talks, which end on November 27. Greenpeace parked a car with a giant fake tuna on its roof near the venue where the talks are being held with "Save me" written along the side of the vehicle.