FRIDAY |MAY 11, 2007  | PHILIPPINES

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Mediterranean tuna stocks
face collapse, says report


GENEVA — Stocks of Mediterranean bluefin tuna, prized for sushi dishes, could collapse if the European Union does not slash quotas for the coming fishing season, the conservation body WWF International said on Thursday.

If tuna numbers drop dramatically, the resulting food chain imbalance would bring a serious decline in the population of sardines, a staple in many diets and a cornerstone of the region’s fisheries industry, WWF said.

"The EU can still choose ... not to be one of the parties responsible for driving tuna to the brink. Fisheries management in Europe must take a new path," said Julian Woolford, head of WWF’s European Fisheries Campaign.

In a briefing paper issued a month before this year’s tuna fishing season begins in the Mediterranean, WWF blamed the situation primarily on the Madrid-based International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT).

It said ICCAT, made up of 42 members plus the 27-member EU, in assigning national catch quotas, ignored advice from its own scientists who recommended a 50 percent cut in the total tuna catch and closure at the peak of the spawning season.

Instead, ICCAT accepted a plan which only reduced the total 2007 catch by 2,500 tons, against the 17,000 cut the scientists wanted, and closed fishing only from July, leaving the tuna especially vulnerable during its peak spawning period.

Further, Turkey and Libya had objected to the ICCAT quota and unilaterally increased their own planned catch.

Experts estimate that wide-scale illegal fishing takes the total actually caught in the Mediterranean to 50,000 tonnes — "more than three times the amount considered sustainable or safe by scientists," WWF said.

It called on the European Union, which accounts for the bulk of the overall Mediterranean tuna catch allocation and determines the quotas of its own members, to hold back on 50 percent of the total assigned to it by ICCAT.

If EU members, among which France, Spain and Italy take most of the catch, cut their own quotas to preserve the tuna "it would help to reduce the threat of collapse and encourage other fishing nations to follow suit," the WWF paper said.

Over the longer term, it added, disappearance of the tuna, a top predator, could have a "catastrophic impact" on species further down the chain — leaving squid, which feed on sardines, to proliferate and undermine sardine stocks.

"It is the traditional tuna fishers who will suffer the most direct impact from the stock’s collapse," said Sergi Tudela, Head of Fisheries at WWF Mediterranean. "The large fleets will move on and plunder a different ocean and a different species."

 


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