Ian, I'm a newspaper reporter in New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. Earlier this year, we published a series on a variety of fisheries issues, including overfishing, entitled :"Oceans of Trouble: Are the World's Fisheries Doomed?." One person I reported on was Segundo Coello, who works for the Ecuador Program for Management of Coastal Resources. In connection with Ecuador's Fisheries Research Institute, he designed a scissors net that included a bycatch reduction device. The net, called a Tijera, is used by larveros - natives who wade into shallow coastal waters to catch shrimp larva for resale to shrimp farms. The larveros dump bycatch on the beach when the come in with their shrimp larva. He is now traveling from village to village teaching women how to sew the new nets themselves. I'm at home, but I think I still have Coello's address at work, and will send it to you next week if I find it. I would imagine he may have some sort of studies indicating the significance of the bycatch problem that he used to convince Ecuadorian officials to finance his program.
Mark Schleifstein The Times-Picayune
|