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         Fisheries Media:     more books (102)
  1. Extends fish shelf life. (ice containing potassium sorbate and citric acid): An article from: Food Processing by James R. Eilers, 1992-12-01
  2. Non-native fishing quotas bought out by MNR.: An article from: Wind Speaker by Roberta Avery, 1999-06-01
  3. Tribe challenges DFO on seal kill licences. (News).(Brief Article): An article from: Wind Speaker by Joan Taillon, 2002-04-01
  4. Burnt Church trap-cutters get conditional discharge.: An article from: Wind Speaker by Paul Barnsley, 2000-04-01
  5. What's next? Burnt Church community savors "victory".: An article from: Wind Speaker by Paul Barnsley, 2000-11-01
  6. This treaty is no more?: An article from: Wind Speaker
  7. Programmed sanitation cuts costs 40%: correct cleaning agents and amounts, with better control and reporting. (turnkey system used to dispense cleaning ... Safety): An article from: Food Processing by Marvin Scher, 1993-02-01
  8. Debt forces band alliance with DFO.: An article from: Wind Speaker by Joan Taillon, 2001-01-01
  9. Nobody should die for patronage (Natives question Liberal governments actions at Burnt Church).: An article from: Wind Speaker
  10. Nawash in fish fight on Lake Huron.: An article from: Wind Speaker by Roberta Avery, 2001-02-01
  11. Racial tension at heart of bitter dispute.: An article from: Wind Speaker by Roberta Avery, 1997-01-01
  12. No benefit for Canadians. (Editorial).(rights of Native people)(Brief Article): An article from: Wind Speaker by Lloyd Augustine, 2002-09-01
  13. New treatment promises safe oysters.: An article from: Food Processing by Frances Katz, 1996-05-01
  14. Throwing the ERP switch.(Plants of Tomorrow: Supply Chain)(enterprise resource planning): An article from: Food Processing by Pan Demetrakakes, 1999-07-01

61. WRI Experts On Public Participation, Fisheries Speak At AAAS Convention
our online bookstore. media ADVISORY WRI Experts on Public Participation,fisheries Speak at AAAS Convention. What. Two WRI researchers
http://newsroom.wri.org/advisory_text.cfm?MediaAdvisoryID=56

62. Print Media - Australian Fisheries Academy

http://www.zynke.com.au/picp_fisheries.html

63. CSIRO Corporate Media Release 96/xxx
2ND WORLD fisheries CONGRESS media LAUNCH. World fish catches are in decline,presenting an enormous challenge for Australia and other fishing nations.
http://www.csiro.au/communication/mediarel/mr96030.htm
All Topics Search Home Page CSIRO MEDIA ALERT 96/30
11 April 1996
2ND WORLD FISHERIES CONGRESS - MEDIA LAUNCH
World fish catches are in decline, presenting an enormous challenge for Australia and other fishing nations. Governments, fishers and managers must 'get smarter.' This year Australia is hosting the 2nd World Fisheries Congress. It presents our $1.6 billion fishing industry with an unique chance to help secure its future by picking the brains of the world's top scientists and fisheries managers. CSIRO Chief Executive Dr Malcolm McIntosh will officiate at the launch, and deliver a statement on the critical importance of marine science in underpinning sustainable development of the resource. He will be supported by science and industry representatives:
  • Dr John Glaister - Congress Chairman; Executive Director, NSW Department of Fisheries
  • Dr Peter Young - Chief, CSIRO Division of Fisheries and President, Australian Society for Fish Biology
  • Mr Richard Stevens - Managing Director, Australian Fisheries Management Authority
  • Mr Peter Dundas-Smith - Executive Director, Fisheries Research and Development Corporation

64. CSIRO Corporate Media Release 96/58
All 1996 Topics Search Home Page CSIRO media RELEASE 96/5826 July 1996 THREAT TO AUSTRALIA'S fisheries OUTLINED. Australia's
http://www.csiro.au/communication/mediarel/mr96058.htm
All Topics Search Home Page CSIRO MEDIA RELEASE 96/58
26 July 1996
THREAT TO AUSTRALIA'S FISHERIES OUTLINED
Australia's fisheries management will come under unprecedented pressure during the next decade a senior CSIRO scientist said, on the eve of the world's largest fisheries congress which opens in Brisbane on Monday. Increasing demand and falling international fish stocks will co-incide with an environmental decline in the world's oceans, to produce the toughest challenge yet to sustainable practices. According to Dr Peter Young, Chief of the CSIRO Division of Fisheries, new approaches to sustainability will need to include not just indicators of the health of stocks but also for the total marine ecosystem. "The health of a fish population can't be separated from its environment. If we can develop techniques to establish both the sustainability of the fish population and the quality of a marine ecosystem that environment can be monitored, and warning signals can be heeded. "Fisheries management will use fallow areas, marine reserves and protected nursery areas to maintain sustainability." As an example of the threat to world fisheries, Dr Young quoted the collapse of the Newfoundland cod industry, which was producing four hundred thousand tonnes of cod per year - a total equal to twice Australia's annual figure for all species. A moratorium has now been declared for this fishery.

65. Empty Oceans, Empty Nets - Habitat Media
University of Maine Walpole, Maine Michael Leo Weber fisheries Research Consultant AdvisoryBoard Links VHS Order Info About Habitat media Contact Us
http://www.habitatmedia.org/advisory.html
esearch and script development for Empty Oceans, Empty Nets and Farming the Seas proceed in close collaboration with our Advisory Board. Our advisors include experts in the fields of marine biology, fisheries ecology, fisheries management, environmental economics, wetlands ecology, and rural sociology. We are also relying on the research and expertise provided by organizations, including the National Academy of Science, the National Research Council, the National Marine Fisheries Service, the eight regional Fisheries Management Councils, the International Center for Living Aquatic Resources Management (ICLARM), the Southeast Asia Fisheries Development Center and the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Our Board members
Richard B. Allen

Commercial Fisherman and Fisheries Consultant
Frmr. Member, New England Fisheries Mgt Council
Wakefield, Rhode Island

66. Empty Oceans, Empty Nets - Habitat Media
Several of Habitat media's awardwinning productions have encouraged consumer awarenessas a positive market incentive for changing the way fisheries operate.
http://www.habitatmedia.org/habitat.html
abitat Media first began as Habitat Productions, founded in 1992 as a project of the Tides Center in San Francisco, a tax-exempt, non-profit organization. A decade later, the mission of the production group remains the same to encourage citizen, consumer and industry involvement in conservation efforts and sustainable development. Habitat Media was formed as a multi-media group in 1999 specifically to produce television documentaries and other educational components that complement these programs. Several of Habitat Media's award-winning productions have encouraged consumer awareness as a positive market incentive for changing the way fisheries operate. Habitat Media has also provided footage for breaking stories on marine conservation issues to television and cable networks (including CBS, ABC, CNN and PBS News Hour), and to organizations like the Monterey Bay Aquarium ( Fishing for Solutions exhibit) and the American Museum of Natural History.

67. Media Advisory: Fisheries And Illinois Aquaculture Center
August 17, 2000. media Advisory fisheries and Illinois AquacultureCenter. By Paula M. Davenport CARBONDALE, Ill. Reporters and
http://news.siu.edu/news/August00/081700p0120.html
August 17, 2000
Media Advisory: Fisheries and Illinois Aquaculture Center
By Paula M. Davenport CARBONDALE, Ill. Reporters and photographers may take behind-the-scenes tours of wet labs and outdoor ponds - - teeming with fish and aquatic plants - - during this weekend's 50th birthday bash at the Southern Illinois University Carbondale Fisheries and Illinois Aquaculture Center. The schedule:
  • 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 19: tour SIUC's on-campus fisheries facilities as well as 90 outdoor culture ponds at the University's Touch of Nature Environmental Center, about 7 miles south of Carbondale on Giant City Road. Tours begin on the SIUC campus in Life Science II, room 173. Park in the lot west of Lawson Hall.
  • 10 a.m. Sunday, Aug. 20: last tour begins, meet at SIUC in Life Science II, room 173.
  • 1 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 20: activities culminate with a picnic for fisheries students, alumni, faculty and staff at Touch of Nature Environmental Center's Freeberg Hall and Sledgefoot Lodge, Camp 2. They'll pay tribute to special guest SIUC professor emeritus William M. Lewis Sr., who launched the center in 1950.
Since then, research by the center's scientists and students has spawned innovations in fisheries management and aquaculture and important discoveries in aquatic ecology, fish biology and fish genetics.

68. Media Monitor -- STREAM Initiative --
From Released Fishing Lots to Community fisheries Management A Grassroots Experiencein Establishing Community fisheries Organizations from Kampong Chhnang
http://www.streaminitiative.org/Library/MediaMonitor/2002/December_2002/Co-Manag
var MenuCreatedBy='AllWebMenus 1.3.360.'; awmAltUrl=''; From Released Fishing Lots to Community Fisheries Management: A Grassroots Experience in Establishing Community Fisheries Organizations from Kampong Chhnang Province, Cambodia [Cambodia, governance, fisheries management] Cambodia is one of the most productive of fresh water fisheries in the world with an annual production of 300,000-400,000 tons. The fishery is important for food security, employment and livelihood for a large portion of the population in the whole country, especially for the rural poor. A large part of the most productive fishing grounds has traditionally been managed through privatised fishing concessions for commercial exploitation, called fishing lots. While the fishing lot system provides a series of useful management regulations, the practice of fishing lot operations has spurred conflicts over access and use rights with local communities. This led the Prime Minister to order a reform of the fisheries sector in October 2000, aiming at involving fishers at community level in the management of the fisheries. Consequently, the Department of Fisheries (DoF) reduced the total area of fishing lots throughout the country by 56%, established a Community Fisheries Development Office (CFDO) and drafted a sub-decree on community fisheries development that is still under revision. Even without an established legal framework, the fisheries administration encouraged and actively supported the facilitation and establishment of community fisheries (CF) committees.

69. Media Monitor -- STREAM Initiative --
fisheries Comanagement in Sirindhorn Reservoir, Ubonratchathani Province,in Thailand A Case Study on the River Sprat (Clupeichthys aesarmensis).
http://www.streaminitiative.org/Library/MediaMonitor/2002/December_2002/Co-Manag
var MenuCreatedBy='AllWebMenus 1.3.360.'; awmAltUrl=''; Fisheries Co-management in Sirindhorn Reservoir, Ubonratchathani Province, in Thailand: A Case Study on the River Sprat (Clupeichthys aesarmensis) [Co-management, Thailand, co-operatives, reservoir] The study was conducted to assess the present fisheries management system, especially related to Pla Kaew ( Clupeichthys aesarmensis , Wongratana, 1983) fisheries management in Sirindhorn reservoir in order to identify the constraints and potentials of the stakeholders involved in fisheries management and who participate in the development of the fisheries management system in Sirindhorn reservoir. The study was carried out in twenty villages of three districts around Sirindhorn reservoir where they operate the Pla Kaew fishery in order to describe the socio-economic status, the current fisheries management procedures, including the existing regulation, implementation, and structure and institutional arrangement. It was aimed at investigating the fishers’ attitudes toward user involvement and co-management of fisheries. Different attitudes of the different interests towards improvement of the fisheries management were also investigated. There were 196 fishers including 96 Pla Kaew fishers and 96 non-Pla Kaew fishers who were interviewed using structured questionnaires. A PRA approach was used to involve all stakeholders in sharing the information. A feedback discussion among stakeholders was used in order to identify strategies for improving the fisheries management.

70. Greenpeace: Media Centre
Shimizu (Japan)/ Amsterdam Greenpeace today called on the fisheries Agency of Japanto prevent a shipment of illegal tuna from being landed in the Japanese
http://www.greenpeace.org/~oceans/stoppiratefishing/media/

News Pictures

Previous Releases:
May 12:
Greenpeace successfully blocks transhipment of illegally caght tuna.
May 8:
Greenpeace confiscates illegal fishing gear
May 6:
Greenpeace disrupts transfer of illegally caught tuna
Politics
Greenpeace letters to Governments and recieved responses

August 9, 2000: Greenpeace urges Japan to block the landing of illegally caught tuna Shimizu (Japan)/ Amsterdam: Greenpeace today called on the Fisheries Agency of Japan to prevent a shipment of illegal tuna from being landed in the Japanese port of Shimizu.
August 11 - Update

In May of this year , the Greenpeace ship MV Greenpeace found the Hatsukari on the high seas of the Atlantic Ocean several hundred nautical miles off the coast of Angola. Greenpeace documented the Hatsukari taking delivery of tuna and servicing fishing vessels from Belize and Cambodia operating illegally in the Atlantic Ocean (2). Six Fisheries Agency inspectors boarded the Hatsukari when it arrived in port today to inspect the logbooks. The Hatsukari admits transhipping tuna from FOC vessels in the Atlantic but claimed this had already been unloaded in South Africa.

71. PIRSA Showcase - Media Releases From 2001
media Products. News Releases. Archived media Releases. media releases from2001. 19/01/01 PIRSA fisheries to Continue Search for Exotic Crab Species.
http://www.pir.sa.gov.au/dhtml/ss/section.php?sectID=1368&tempID=3

72. 24/01/03 - Fisheries Act Review - Comments Needed In Port Lincoln
A public meeting to discuss the review of the fisheries Act 1982, will be heldin Port Lincoln on Monday, February 3 at the Civic Hall media room.
http://www.pir.sa.gov.au/pages/showcase/media/current/24.01fisheries.ptlin.htm:s
Welcome to the PIRSA Web About PIRSA Industry Development Office of Regional Development ... Current Media Releases
- Other documents in this section - Caulerpa taxifolia found in West Lakes 01/04/03 - Leadership key to future rural development 03/02/03 - Focus on improved lucerne seed quality 03/02/03 - Security of Access to Fisheries - Comments Needed! 04/02/03 - Fisheries Act Review - comments needed in Pt Pirie 04/04/03 - Illegal fish sales 04/04/03 - March lobster catch statistics - Southern Zone 05/02/03 - Fisheries Act Review - comments needed in Berri 05/02/03 - Fisheries Review Act - comments needed in Maitland 05/02/03 - Public comment sought on Fisheries Act - Pt Wakefield 07/03/03 - Commercial fisher reported for quota evasion 07/04/03 - Showcasing SA's gas and oil potential 10/02/03 - January lobster catch statistics - Southern Zone 11/02/03 - SA's Rural Legends announced today 11/03/03 - On-farm component to be added to ChemCert training 11/03/03 - Suspended Jail Sentence for Abalone Offenders 12/02/03 - FISHCARE volunteers at local jetties this weekend 12/03/03 - Aquaculture Information Sessions 13/01/03 - Recreational fishing, commercial access rights - comments needed!

73. Media & Publications - NIWA
Navigation Menu. media Publications. media Releases. Recent. Archive. Climate–EnergyMatters. Climate Update. fisheries Aquaculture Update. Island Climate Update.
http://www.niwa.co.nz/pubs/
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Media Contact Geoff Baird
Science Communication
g.baird@niwa.co.nz
Publications Contact
Mike Beardsell
Science Communication
m.beardsell@niwa.co.nz
Make a general enquiry
Media Releases
NIWA releases information to the media regarding our research or issues and events we feel are newsworthy. These media releases are provided online as well as via more traditional means.
Latest Media Releases
Aussie lobsters cross the ditch (28 Mar 2003)
More details
Snapper tag mortality study (SNA2002/04) (3 Mar 2003)
During the first week in March NIWA will be conducting experimental work to assess survivorship amongst snapper tagged with its newly developed electronic tag.
More details
Earlier Media Releases
You can also see a summary of recent releases (from the last few months), or an archive of releases since March 1998
Climate Summaries
The latest monthly climate summary , plus seasonal and annual summaries.

74. Interpretive Resources About Fisheries
of Fish and Game, California Salmon Stamp program and Cal/Nevada Chapter of theAmerican fisheries Society. POC N/A media TYPE VHS Video DURATION 2750
http://www.usace.army.mil/nrm/interp/fisheries.html
Interpretive Resources about Fisheries
Bt Ix Up USACE Home
Table of Contents
Fishing Rodeo
ToC SUBJECT: Fishing Rodeo
PURCHASE SOURCE: West Point Lake Office,
500 Resource Management Drive,
West Point, GA 31833-9517
POC: West Point Lake, Mobile District; 706/654-2937
MEDIA TYPE: Demonstrations, contests
DURATION: one day TARGET AUDIENCE: Preteen NARRATIVE: The annual event is held in conjunction with National Safe Boating Week and National Fishing Week. Children are given boat rides to promote water safety awareness and are provided a chance to fish in the stocked pond. Prizes are awarded for various age groups based on the catch. CATEGORY: Fishing
The Lifecycle of the Chinook Salmon
ToC SUBJECT: The Lifecycle of the Chinook Salmon; The title of the film "The Return of the King" PURCHASE SOURCE: This is a public service documentary produced by KEET-TV, Eureka, CA, in cooperation with the California Dept. of Fish and Game, California Salmon Stamp program and Cal/Nevada Chapter of the American Fisheries Society. POC: N/A MEDIA TYPE: VHS Video DURATION: 27:50 minutes TARGET AUDIENCE: Adult/ Young adult NARRATIVE: Narrated by Raymond Burr; This film "Return of the King" elaborates on the lifestyle of the Chinook Salmon in California, highlights threats to its habitat and how volunteers have worked to restore native habitat.

75. Alaska Organizations, Processors, And Media Links
Alaska Business Monthly Alaska fisheries Report Alaska Public Radio Network Anchorage DailyNews Links to Southeast Alaska News and media National Fisherman
http://www.alaska.net/~mpaust/Pages/orglinks.html
Alaska Fisheries Organizations
Alaska Marine Safety Education Association
Alaska Fisheries Development Foundation

Alaskan Shellfish Growers Association

At-Sea Processors Association
...
Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute's list of organizations
(mailing addresses and telephone numbers)
Alaska Seafood Processors
Alaska Seafood Marketing Institute's database of seafood suppliers (searchable by name, product, and product form)
More Alaska and Marine Media Links
Alaska Business Monthly
Alaska Fisheries Report

Alaska Public Radio Network

Anchorage Daily News
...
Sitka Sentinel
More Alaska Environmental Group links
Alaska National Resource and Outdoor Education Association
Alaska Wilderness Recreation and Tourism Association

Southeast Alaska Conservation Council
Sitka Conservation Society

76. SLDF - Media Archives
in the annual reports, I give the Federal Government an F for failing their constitutionalresponsibility to protect fisheries in Canada Back to media Archives.
http://www.sierralegal.org/m_archive/1998-9/pr98_07_13.htm
PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE - JULY 13, 1998 FISHERIES GROUPS WIN COURT CASE AGAINST MINISTER OF FISHERIES In a court case brought by the United Fishermen and Allied Workers' Union (UFAWU/CAW) and the Friends of the Oldman River, with the legal assistance of the Sierra Legal Defence Fund, the Federal Court of Canada has ordered the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans to comply with key requirements of the Fisheries Act . The Act requires the Minister to produce an annual report to Parliament on the enforcement of the Act , including a summary of the convictions under the Act . Six months after the groups commenced the lawsuit, the Minister consented to a judgment against himself. The Judgment of the Federal Court declares that the Minister has violated the Act for the years 1995, 1996 and 1997 and requires him to produce complete annual reports for those years. The Federal Court's judgment follows a long series of demands by the groups that the Minister release the annual reports and refusals by the Minister to do so. The groups wrote to the Minister twice in late 1997 and demanded that he release annual reports for 1995, 1996 and 1997. The Minister then released reports for 1995 and 1996 that did not contain any summary of convictions under the Act . The Minister wrote to the groups to explain that he had handed over responsibility for enforcement of the Act to the provinces and that as a result his department had no idea how effectively key pollution prevention and fish habitat protection sections of the

77. MEDIA RELEASE - International Complaint Launched Against Canada For Failing To E
Email this article to a friend, media RELEASE. International Complaint LaunchedAgainst Canada For Failing To Enforce fisheries Laws. Wednesday, March 15, 2000.
http://www.sierralegal.org/m_archive/2000/pr00_03_15.htm
Email this
article to

a friend

MEDIA RELEASE International Complaint Launched Against Canada For Failing To Enforce Fisheries Laws Wednesday, March 15, 2000 VANCOUVER: At a time when salmon species are in serious decline, British Columbia logging companies continue to destroy fish and fish habitat with impunity owing to the failure of Canada to enforce its own environmental laws. In response to this grave situation a formal complaint was filed today at the North American Commission on Environmental Cooperation by a international alliance of environmental groups represented by the Sierra Legal Defence Fund. "The failure to regulate logging practices in British Columbia poses a serious threat to fisheries," says Sierra Legal lawyer Randy Christensen. "Forest companies routinely and systematically undertake practices that harm fish and destroy fish habitat." Sierra Legal Defence Fund filed the complaint on behalf of five Canadian and United States environmental groups: the David Suzuki Foundation, Greenpeace Canada, the Sierra Club of British Columbia, the Northwest Ecosystem Alliance, which is based in Washington state, and the Natural Resources Defence Council, based in Washington, D.C. Forest Practices Code is not in compliance with the federal Fisheries Act Forest Practices Code . The code, which was introduced in 1995, regulates logging on public lands.

78. ENVIRONMENTALISTS PRESSURE FISHERIES COUNCIL TO PROTECT NORTH PACIFIC: Press Rel
NMFS to consider alternative ways to manage the North Pacific fisheries. of Alaskaecosystems. Contact Aaron Bannon of the Greenpeace media Department (202
http://www.greenpeaceusa.org/media/press_releases/01_12_05btext.htm
press releases ENVIRONMENTALISTS PRESSURE FISHERIES COUNCIL TO PROTECT NORTH PACIFIC
December 5, 2001, ANCHORAGE
— The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) is presenting to the North Pacific Fishery Management Council its framework for significantly revising a plan to protect the ecosystems of the Bering Sea and Gulf of Alaska, after finally recognizing its previous plan was legally defective. Greenpeace, the American Oceans Campaign, and the Sierra Club hailed this announcement as an opportunity for the Council to put the needs of the ocean ecosystem before the fishing industry by significantly altering fishing practices, and are calling on the Council to put forth a true ecosystem alternative for consideration by NMFS. In response to the comments of the groups that its draft plan was fatally flawed, NMFS last week announced its intention to return to the drawing board. "If you are not alarmed by the serious declines of Steller sea lions, otters, fur seals, birds, and other marine life in the North Pacific, you're not paying attention," said Phil Kline of American Oceans Campaign. "Industrial fishing removes huge amounts of fish that are important prey for other fish and marine animals, and these removals effect the entire health of the food chain." The announcement by NMFS was spurred by a 1998 lawsuit brought by Greenpeace, American Oceans Campaign and the Sierra Club, represented by Earthjustice and Trustees for Alaska. According to the groups, industrial fishing for pollock has had devastating effects on Steller sea lions, a species unique to the Alaskan coast. Once numbering almost 250,000, the sea lion population has plummeted to under 50,000 in just 30 years and was added to the endangered species list in 1997.

79. Press Releases: Media Center: Greenpeace USA
media Center, press releases. FEDERAL JUDGE RULES fisheries SERVICE POLICIESVIOLATE LAW. WASHINGTON, January 27, 2000 In yet another
http://www.greenpeaceusa.org/media/press_releases/00_01_27text.htm
press releases FEDERAL JUDGE RULES FISHERIES SERVICE POLICIES VIOLATE LAW WASHINGTON, January 27, 2000 In yet another blow to the policies of the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS), the federal district court of the Western District of Washington has ruled that the agency continues to violate federal law. The federal judge's ruling validates Greenpeace's concerns, raised for over a decade, that question the health of the ecosystem of the North Pacific waters. The ruling, released Tuesday in Seattle, found that the NMFS continues to violate the Endangered Species Act (ESA). This ruling follows an earlier decision by the same court that concluded the NMFS had been operating without any understanding of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), and, therefore, was neglecting to identify the true impact on the environment of its decision. Specifically, the ruling states that the NMFS has completely failed to consider the effects of its management of the North Pacific groundfish fisheries on endangered species, such as the Steller sea lion. "The Fisheries Service has undermined its credibility with the Court in its ability to protect the endangered Steller sea lion," said Paul Clarke of Greenpeace. "Greenpeace has long been skeptical of the Fisheries Service's repeated concessions to the industrial trawl fleet. Now the court has shown that we were not mistaken."

80. MEDIA ADVISORY
Five Years Since Congress Mandated US fisheries Reform,. A new reportprovides further evidence that our fisheries crisis is escalating.
http://www.conservefish.org/press/actrelease.html
NEWS FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Oct. 11, 2001 Marine Fish Conservation Network Contact: Damien Newton (202) 543-5509 or Andrea Kavanagh (202) 887-8822
Five Years Since Congress Mandated U.S. Fisheries Reform, New Report Finds Anticipated Recovery Stymied by Mismanagement Rare Success Stories of Science and Aggressive Conservation Offer Hope WASHINGTON (Oct. 11, 2001) — Five years after Congress ordered the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) to restore U.S. fish stocks to healthy levels mismanagement prevails. A new report provides further evidence that our fisheries crisis is escalating. A record number of federally managed fish stocks are now in jeopardy from overexploitation, including 31 species that are at risk of extinction, while poor federal management and legal loopholes skirt the problem. The report “Caught in the Act,” released today by the Marine Fish Conservation Network, a coalition of environmentalists, fishermen, and scientists, chronicles NMFS’s failures in implementing the 1996 Sustainable Fisheries Act. Under the law, NMFS and its eight management councils were directed to:

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