******* Note to list members: These reports from the U.S. Congressional Research Service, are generally posted once a week and are made available by way of friendly staff in congress.
This posting consists of new material from these summaries, obtained by extracting only the material in {curly brackets}. In some cases, when new material is inserted into an existing paragraph, the new material may not make much sense by itself. Hint: if the lines in a paragraph are very uneven, it is probably because the new material was added to an existing paragraph, and the old stuff was cut out. *******
MARINE FISHERIES
On Feb. 14-17, 2000, Ocean Wildlife Campaign, two foundations, and the Monterey Bay Aquarium are sponsoring an International Pelagic Shark Workshop in Pacific Grove, CA [ http://www.wcs.org/pelagicworkshop.html ].
Long Island Sound Lobsters. On Jan. 20, 2000, Univ. of Connecticut scientists met with Long Island Sound lobstermen to share results of recent investigations. The scientists reported finding Paramoeba parasites in diseased lobster nerve cells, but expressed concern that lobsters may have been debilitated by some other factor allowing the Paramoeba parasite to flourish. [Assoc Press]
New England Groundfish. On Jan. 19, 2000, the New England Fishery Management Council voted on 4 options for year 2000 groundfish management in the Gulf of Maine and on Georges Bank. The Council voted 9-7 to extend the closure of Gulf of Maine fishing grounds to 4 consecutive months (January-April) beginning in 2001 and extend existing no- fishing zones in the western Gulf of Maine for another year. In addition, the Council voted to close a 6,000 square mile portion of Georges Bank to fishing during May to protect spawning cod. NMFS officials reported that 1999 Gulf of Maine cod landings are projected to be near the target of 3 million pounds. [Assoc Press, Boston Herald]
Illegal Shrimping. On Jan. 19, 2000, a Coast Guard Auxiliary flight videotaped a shrimper illegally fishing in the Oculina Bank Habitat Area of Particular Concern, east of Fort Pierce, FL. The shrimper was intercepted, and inspectors found the vessel's turtle excluder devices were sewn shut. The vessel was escorted to Fort Pierce for NMFS prosecution. [personal communication]
2000 Restoration Workshop. On Jan. 18-19, 2000, the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council held a "2000 Restoration Workshop" in Anchorage, AK, to discuss research on climatic change and the recovery rate of marine life supported by oil spill damage compensation funds. [MSNBC]
NJ Fiber Optic Cable. On Jan. 14, 2000, officials of AT&T and Sprint asked the NJ Dept. of Environmental Protection not to grant a hearing request from clam fishermen who are concerned about AT&T's plans to install a $1.5 billion TAT-14 fiber optic cable links from Tuckerton, NJ, to England and from Manasquan, NJ, to Denmark. AT&T seeks NJ approval for cable installation, while fishermen seek deeper burying of cables and removal of older, unused cables. [Assoc Press]
Pacific Groundfish. On Jan. 4, 2000, NMFS published an emergency rule, as recommended by the Pacific Fishery Management Council (PFMC), reducing and restricting the commercial harvest of lingcod (61% reduction), Pacific ocean perch (55% reduction), bacaccio (63% reduction), canary rockfish (85% reduction), cowcod, and 5 other species of Pacific rockfish along the coasts of WA, OR, and CA Loss to the fishing industry is estimated to be between $3 million and $15 million. The PFMC is required to develop rebuilding plans for overfished rockfish populations and submit them to NMFS within 1 year. On Jan. 19, 2000, the federal government declared a fishery disaster for West Coast groundfish, citing direct losses by fishermen as $11 million. [Assoc Press, Fed. Register]
Shrimp Embargo. On Dec. 22, 1999, the United States and Malaysia informed the World Trade Organization's Dispute Settlement Body that they had reached an understanding on possible proceedings relative to U.S. shrimp import sanctions and sea turtle protection certification. [personal communication]
SALMON ALONG THE PACIFIC COAST
AQUACULTURE AND AQUARIA
GM Fish. On Jan. 22, 2000, Greenpeace International is scheduled to release a report on environmental concerns associated with genetically modified (GM) fish. [personal communication]
Tuna Feedlot Approval. On Jan. 20, 2000, South Australia's Development Assessment Commission approved plans for 42 new tuna feedlots to be constructed and operated in Louth Bay, near Port Lincoln, South Australia. In response, the Conservation Council threatened to appeal this decision to the Supreme Court. [Australian Broadcasting Corp.]
FRESHWATER FISHERIES
MARINE MAMMALS
Dolphin Mass Stranding. On Jan. 16, 2000, about 100 bottlenose dolphins became stranded in a shallow lagoon at Long Key, FL, with at least 23 dying before volunteers and the FL Marine Patrol could free the others. On Jan. 18, 2000, an additional group of 9 bottlenose dolphins stranded at Little Torch Key, FL, with 3 dying. [Miami Herald, Assoc Press, MSNBC]
Japanese Whaling. In mid-January 2000, the Director General of Japan's Institute of Cetacean Research informed Greenpeace that, if confrontational protests continue, the Captain of the Japanese whaling vessel Nisshin Maruwill, under Japanese domestic law, take Greenpeace activists into custody. [Japan Whaling Assoc press release]
Keiko. In mid-January 2000, divers finished stringing a net across the mouth of Klettsvik Bay, Iceland, where Keiko's handlers hope to release the orca whale from its holding pen into the enclosed bay in February 2000. [Assoc Press]
In mid-January 2000, the Secretariat to CITES recognized the Japanese and Norwegian argument that minke whales and eastern Pacific gray whales are not threatened with extinction and are inappropriately included on CITES Appendix I, but provisionally recommended that a "zero quota" for minke whale harvest be adopted if trade is permitted by Parties at the April 2000 meeting. [High North Alliance News, Greenpeace press release, The Antarctican]
><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> To leave the Fish-Sci list, Send blank message to: mailto:[log in to unmask] For information send INFO FISH-SCI to [log in to unmask] ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><> ><>
|