South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Fishing decline unlikely to rescue rare species

- By Patrick Whittle and Christina Larson

A small load of pollack comes off a boat in March at the Portland Fish Exchange in Maine.

PORTLAND, Maine — Commercial fishing taking place worldwide has dipped since the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic, but scientists and conservati­on experts say it’s unclear if the slowdown will help endangered species of marine life recover.

Hours logged by fishermen at sea fell by nearly 10% around the world after the March 11 declaratio­n of a pandemic. In some hardhit countries such as China, fishing completely stopped.

The fishing decline has spurred questions about food security, ocean management and global trade.

As countries begin to resume fishing, new questions are emerging about whether an extended fishing slowdown could help rare ocean animals, such as the North Atlantic right whale.

The whale numbers only about 400 and is vulnerable to fatal entangleme­nt in fishing gear.

Less fishing could also help jeopardize­d fish stocks of the Mediterran­ean Sea, home to the overfished Atlantic bluefin tuna. And many rare species are vulnerable to accidental catch, called bycatch, in fishing gear.

But it’s too early to hail the respite from fishing lines and nets, said David Kroodsma, director of research and innovation for the nonprofit Global Fishing Watch. And since millions of people rely on fishing for their livelihood­s and sustenance, any benefit to sea life has come at a cost, he said.

“I don’t think we should be celebratin­g anything here. Not by making people suffer incredibly,” he said. “I bet what we’ll find is, it is not sufficient for rebuilding stocks in places they have to rebuild.”

Fishermen around the world logged about 6.8 million hours at sea from March 11 to April 28, down about 700,000 hours from averages the previous two years, according to data compiled by Global Fishing Watch.

The Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations said the pandemic has brought “changing consumer demands, market access or logistical problems” that could keep fishing difficult indefinite­ly.

The time spent with boats docked was much more severe in countries such as Italy, Spain and France, which suffered large virus outbreaks, Kroodsma said. Fishing in those countries was down 50% to 75%, he said.

 ?? ROBERT F. BUKATY/AP ??
ROBERT F. BUKATY/AP

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