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Subject: CRS Summary - Part 3/4
From: Aldo-Pier Solari <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:[log in to unmask]
Date:Sat, 28 Jun 1997 20:56:54 GMT
Content-Type:text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
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text/plain (146 lines)


From: Kate Wing <[log in to unmask]>

Norwegian Salmon.   On  June  1,  1997,  the  European Commission
approved  a  compromise  on  Norwegian  farmed  salmon   imports.
Instead of imposing antidumping duties, a five-year agreement was
negotiated to include a minimum price for the salmon, an increase
in  the  Norwegian  export duty on this product from 0.75% to 3%,
and a limitation on the growth of  exports to the EU of about 10%
per year.  [Reuters, Agence Europe via Reuters]

Fish as Pollutants.  In late May 1997,  the  WA  state  Pollution
Control  Hearings  Board  declared  Atlantic salmon escaping from
fish farms to be a  "living  pollutant" to be regulated similarly
to sewage and industrial waste.  The Board has scheduled a  5-day
hearing  in Olympia, beginning July 24, 1997, to consider whether
escaped salmon harm native fish and, if so, what options might be
considered.  [Assoc Press]

Freshwater Fisheries

{Greenback  Cutthroat  Trout  Restoration.   On  June  24,  1997,
Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt  announced a $97,000 grant under
the "Bring Back the Natives" program to the  Uncompaghre-Gunnison
National Forest, CO, for fish passage work on Beaver Creek to aid
recovery of native greenback cutthroat trout.} [Assoc Press]

{Flaming  Gorge  Dam  Spill.   On  June 21, 1997, the spillway at
Flaming Gorge Dam on the UT-WY border was used for the first time
in more than a decade after  an  outlet tube failed and the power
plant flooded.  Biologists  expressed  concern  that  the  warmer
surface  water  discharge COULD harm coldwater fish such as trout
in the Green River below the Dam.} [Assoc Press]

CITES Proposal - Sturgeons.   In  mid-June 1997, the delegates to
the  CITES  (Convention  on  International  Trade  in  Endangered
Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) conference in Zimbabwe adopted a
joint German and U.S.  proposal to list all  sturgeons  on  CITES
Appendix II.  [Reuters]

Aquatic Nuisance Species Management Plans.  On June 11, 1997, the
U.S.   Fish  and  Wildlife  Service  announced  approval  of OH's
Aquatic Nuisance Species Management  Plan  and  the awarding of a
$25,000 grant to the Ohio Dept.  of Natural  Resources  to  begin
the  Plan's  implementation.   [U.S.   Fish  and Wildlife Service
press release, Assoc Press]

Bull Trout.   On  June  10,  1997,  the  U.S.   Fish and Wildlife
Service, under court order, proposed listing Klamath  River  bull
trout  as  endangered and Columbia River bull trout as threatened
under the  Endangered  Species  Act.   Five  public  hearings are
scheduled on the proposal between July 1  and  July  17.   Public
comments will be taken until Aug.  12, 1997.  {IN LATE JUNE 1997,
THE  GOVERNORS  OF  MT AND ID, REPRESENTATIVES OF NATIVE AMERICAN
TRIBES,  AND  OFFICIALS  OF  WASHINGTON  WATER  POWER  SIGNED  AN
AGREEMENT TO COORDINATE THE  DEVELOPMENT  OF A UNIFIED BULL TROUT
RECOVERY  EFFORT  WITH  WA  WATER  POWER'S   HYDROPOWER   PROJECT
RELICENSING  ON  THE  LOWER  CLARK  FORK  RIVER.}  [Assoc  Press,
WASHINGTON WATER POWER PRESS RELEASE]

Pocomoke  River  fish  lesions.   On  June 10, 1997, MD Dept.  of
Natural Resources officials expanded  their  study into the cause
of lesions on white perch, croakers, catfish,  and  carp  in  the
Pocomoke River drainage.  The lesions were first reported about 9
months  ago.  Although some consider the fungus, Actinomyces sp.,
to be  the  cause  of  the  lesions,  researchers  are seeking to
understand why these fish seem to be  especially  susceptible  to
the  fungus.   Others  at NC State Univ.  contend that Pfiesteria
piscicida is causing the Pocomoke River lesions.  [Assoc Press]

Marine Mammals

{TUNA-DOLPHIN LEGISLATION.  ON  JUNE  26,  1997, THE U.S.  SENATE
COMMITTEE ON COMMERCE, SCIENCE, AND TRANSPORTATION MARKED-UP  AND
ORDERED  S.  39  REPORTED  AS  AMENDED  TO  ALLOW  THE USE OF THE
'DOLPHIN-SAFE' LABEL IF  NO  DOLPHINS  ARE  OBSERVED TO HAVE BEEN
KILLED OR SERIOUSLY INJURED DURING TUNA HARVEST.} [REUTERS]

{Japanese Research Whaling.   On  June  25,  1997,  officials  of
Japan's  Institute  of  Cetacean  Research announced the terms of
sale for 1,995 tons of  meat  from  440 minke whales taken in the
Southern Ocean between November 1996 and March 1997.   This  meat
is  to  be  sold  primarily  to  processor  of canned foods, with
projected revenue of  3.5  billion  yen.  Prime-quality meant for
general consumption would be sold wholesale  for  3,840  yen  per
kilogram,  with  the retail price to be three times the wholesale
price.} [Dow Jones News]

Captive Orcas Die.  In mid-June 1997, two of the 5 orcas captured
off Taiji, Japan, on Feb.   7,  1997, died in captivity.  On June
14, 1997, the youngest male orca captured died at Nanki Shirahama
Adventure World.  On June 17, 1997, a female  orca  at  the  same
facility  died;  this whale was pregnant when captured, but had a
miscarriage in April 1997.  [personal communication]

Mortality Events.  In  mid-June  1997,  nine dead dolphins washed
ashore on Delaware beaches, many of them newborn animals.   Cause
of  the  mortality  could not be immediately determined.  Between
late May and mid-June 1997, 17 adult harbor seals have been found
dead on beaches  in  Marin  County,  CA.   The  cause of death is
undetermined.  [Assoc Press]

Pirate  Whaling?    In   mid-June   1997,   NMFS   requested   an
investigation of reports that as many as 12 sperm whale carcasses
were  sighted  in  the  central  Atlantic,  200 miles west of the
Azores   Islands,   with    large    orange   buoys   and   radar
reflectors/beacons  nearby.    The   Portuguese   government   is
reportedly  sending  a  naval vessel to investigate.  Dead whales
began to be reported by yachts  on May 13, 1997, and two possible
whaling vessels operating without lights  were  reported  on  May
27-28.  [personal communication]

CITES  -  Whales.   On June 13, 1997, delegates at the meeting of
CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of
Wild Fauna and Flora) Parties  in  Zimbabwe voted 27-51 by secret
ballot to defeat a Japanese proposal  to  sever  linkage  between
CITES  and  the  International  Whaling  Commission, giving whale
conservation monitoring to CITES  exclusively.  On June 16, 1997,
CITES delegates rejected by a 47 to 64 vote a  Japanese  proposal
to downlist eastern Pacific gray whales.  On June 17, 1997, CITES
meeting  delegates  rejected  additional  proposals  by Japan and
Norway to  downlist  several  minke  whale  populations and allow
international trade in certain whale products.  Norway's  request
on  minke  whales  failed  on  a secret ballot vote of 57-51, not
having  achieved  the  two-thirds  majority  required.  Delegates
voted 45-65 by secret ballot to defeat Japanese proposal on  west
Pacific minke whales and voted 53-59 by secret ballot to defeat a
Japanese  proposal on Southern Ocean minke whales.  Subsequently,
Japan withdrew a third proposal to downlist Bryde's whales in the
northwest Pacific.  [Reuters, Dow Jones News, Assoc Press]

Hawaiian Whale Sanctuary.   June  6,  1997,  was  the deadline by
which HI Governor Ben Cayetano was to have decided how  much,  if
any,  of  a  proposed  1,680  square  miles  of  state waters and
submerged lands should  be  included  within the Hawaiian Islands
Humpback Whale National Marine Sanctuary and  managed  under  its
federal management plan.  [Assoc Press]

Norwegian Whaling.  On June 9, 1997, a Dutch court decided not to
grant Norway's request for extradition of Paul Watson; Watson was
subsequently  released.   On  June  11, 1997, Oslo district court
rejected whalers' arguments  in  a  lawsuit against the Norwegian
government, and ruled that the government had the right  to  stop
whaling  from  1988  to  1992.  [Assoc Press, High North Alliance
News, Dow Jones News, personal communication]
....
End of Part 3/4

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