FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact:
Steve Roady / Jennifer Chavez, Earthjustice (202) 667-4500
Overfishing
in Gulf of Mexico Quickly Destroying Bluefin Tuna Populations
Activists file suit against NMFS to enforce prohibitions against illegal
longline fishing
Bluefin
tuna are a unique species of tuna, growing on average up to ten feet in length
and weighing over 1,500 pounds. They can travel great distances, sometimes
crossing the
“For
25 years, people have been trying hard to get NMFS to turn this nosedive
around. NMFS should do what the law requires before the bluefin tuna population
crashes and burns,” said Carl Safina, president of Blue Ocean Institute.
“This
is a charismatic fish species, a major predator that plays a crucial role in
the web of oceanic life – but its population is at a dangerously low level,”
said Earthjustice attorney Steve Roady. “Bluefin populations have been steadily
declining for the last 20 years. The Fisheries Service has a responsibility to
follow the law, recognize the important scientific discoveries that show the
bluefin spawns during certain times and places when longline fishing is killing
off huge numbers of fish, and protect the spawning bluefin.”
NMFS
is responsible for stewardship of our oceans, using science-based conservation
and management for the promotion of healthy ecosystems. But the agency is
allowing longline fishing in the
“The
law and the science are very clear in this instance, yet the Fisheries Service
has continually failed to implement management changes that would stop illegal
bycatch and help the western Atlantic bluefin population recover,” said
Earthjustice attorney Jennifer Chavez. “Scientific evidence has shown these
fish are present between January and June in the
Scientists
published an article in Nature magazine in 2005 that tracked bluefin
schools as they traveled across the Atlantic Ocean, demonstrating that the fish
spawned in the Gulf of Mexico and moved up along the east coast and even as far
as the Mediterranean Sea. Research by scientists around the world has done much
over the years to aid a better understanding of the bluefin habits, but its
most recent assessment show bluefin population estimates at their lowest ever,
while fishing pressure is at its highest. Anecdotal reports from Atlantic
fishers confirm what the scientific reports show – the overfished Atlantic
bluefin populations continue to decline.