| Bycatch: Why it's bad for sharks |
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Bycatch is when a species of fish or marine mammal is unintentionally caught while fishing for a specific 'target' species. This unwanted catch is usually thrown back into the sea dead or dying, depending upon their perceived value to the fishermen. An estimated 50 million sharks are caught unintentionally as bycatch in commercial fisheries every year. Longlines, trawls, and gillnets prove to be some of the most problematic fishing methods, producing large numbers of shark bycatch. Often, these unintentionally caught sharks will have their fins removed as the fins are too valuable for many fishermen to resist.
Sharks can represent an unusually high percentage of the bycatch compared to other species because they are often the same size as the target species or they are attracted to the easy prey that has already been caught. Comments (1)
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dave ball
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... last year a fisherman dropped his long line in an area off north devon where a colony of porbeagle live and caught 60 in one go. in 2003 a fisherman did the same off the cornish coast and caught 100 porbeagle he then boasted he had landed 65 the previous week. In european waters fish quotas are given to fishermen to limit the size of their catch. There is no quota for any shark so they can catch what they like. How can we get protection from cites or some one else for sharks. Protect tem now before they all end up on along line. |
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