Eco label granted for swordfish caught on controversial longlines
  Consumers who buy one company’s swordfish caught off eastern Florida will see a blue and white label at the store that assures them the fish was caught with utmost care for life in the Atlantic Ocean.
The company awarded the eco label, Day Boat Seafood of Lake Park, Fla., says it’s a reward for years of working to take only fish from a healthy population. Conservationists, however, are concerned because most of the company’s swordfish are caught on surface longlines, which sometimes stretch for 30 miles, with hundreds of hooks.
“Long-line fisheries catch whatever is swimming by,” said Teri Shore of SeaTurtles.org, an advocacy group that objected to the certification by the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC). “It’s not sustainable for the oceans.”
The MSC’s certification for Day Boat Seafood, granted in December, was the first for any fish in the world caught on ocean-surface longlines.
The eastern Canadian longline swordfish industry, which is five times larger and sells mainly to the United States, is waiting for a decision, expected soon, about whether it will also get the MSC’s label.. An assessor reviewed the case of the Canadian fishery and recommended certification. An independent judge is reviewing objections.
The label is a marketing tool. Some consumers make purchase decisions based on it. Stores such as Wal-Mart, Target and Whole Foods say they intend to carry MSC-certified fish.
The MSC website says its vision is “the world’s oceans teeming with life, and seafood supplies safeguarded for this and future generations.” The MSC sets standards and grants its certification once an independent assessor determines they’re met.
Shore said that one of her biggest concerns is that the MSC doesn’t consider how the effects in different places add up.
“They look at each fishery as if no other fishery existed. That is not a sustainable perspective. That’s the problem,” she said.
Turtles and swordfish migrate between Canada and Florida. Shore said her group argued that there’s not enough information to know whether or not longlines harm sea-turtle populations.
Leatherbacks are listed as being in danger of extinction. Loggerheads are listed as threatened, which is defined as likely to become endangered in the foreseeable future.
“The bottom line from our point of view for sea-turtle protection is, after 40 years on the endangered species list, no U.S. population of sea turtles has recovered, and longline fishing remains one of the primary reasons,” Shore said.
Scott Taylor, a co-founder of Day Boat Seafood, disagreed.
“The fact of the matter is, this is really a non-issue,” he said. “It makes my blood boil.”
He said that the real problems for turtles were from loss of habitat and collisions with ships and pleasure boats.
Taylor said that his vessels have had no observed turtle deaths in the past five years.
“We do interact occasionally. A turtle will get either hooked or entangled in a line. I think there were something like 40 or 50 documented interactions over a five-year period, all of which were live releases.”
Longlines also catch swordfish that are too small to keep, as well as sharks, diving sea birds, bluefin tuna and game fish such as blue marlins. Taylor said the amount of bycatch (unintended and unwanted catch) is low. U.S. law requires each boat to keep a bycatch log and send the reports to the National Marine Fisheries Service. NMFS observers go on about 10 percent of the trips, he said.
Taylor said his company agreed to take extra measures, such as increasing the number of independent observers to verify the accuracy of its bycatch reports, to counter critics. In five years, he plans to have observers on all vessels.
About 25 percent of Day Boat’s swordfish catch is from buoy gear instead of longlines. One or two hooks are attached to each buoy. They’re watched from the boat, and each line is hauled up quickly when it has a fish on it. Longlines, by contrast, generally aren’t hauled in for eight hours or longer.
Buoy gear produces less bycatch, but fishermen don’t use it exclusively because they can’t get enough fish, Taylor said.
NMFS requires fishermen to get trained in how to release sea turtles. They also must use a type of hook that turtles are less likely to swallow. The vessels’ location must be monitored. Observers join some fishing trips to check bycatch amounts. Lines must be long enough so that if turtles are snagged they can swim to the surface to breathe. NMFS also closes some areas for protection.
“We think it has worked,” said Margo Schulze-Haugen, chief of the agency’s highly migratory species management division. Turtle losses have declined to what scientists have determined are acceptable limits, she said.
“There are many longline fisheries in the world that do not take anywhere near the care of the ecosystem that the U.S. does,” Schulze-Haugen said.
SeaTurtles.org, however, argued that not enough is known about sea turtles to certify longlines like the ones Day Boat Seafood uses as sustainable.
“While this is a small fishery, there isn’t enough observer coverage or scientific data to determine whether or not on its own it harms the sea turtle populations or not,” Shore said. One area of uncertainty, she said, is how many turtles are released alive but die as a result of being hooked.
One recent study by NMFS scientists and others, published Dec. 31 in a scientific journal, found that fewer female loggerheads nesting at Juno Beach in Florida were surviving in the ocean than previously thought. The scientists used satellite tagging to follow female loggerheads. They concluded that more studies were needed, but that if additional work verifies their findings, stronger conservation measures may be needed.
Kerry Coughlin, regional director for the Americas with the Marine Stewardship Council, said the experts involved in the certification looked closely at the issue of endangered and threatened turtles. Conservation groups made suggestions, and the company agreed to implement some of them, Coughlin said. The end result is a gain for turtles, she said.
Lee Crockett, who oversees federal fisheries policy at the Pew Environment Group, said that just because Day Boat Seafood got the eco label doesn’t mean that all longline fishing is sustainable.
“I think Day Boat is unique in the way they approach their fishing and their business practices and their commitment to do a better job,” he said.
Jennifer Jacquet of the Sea Around Us Project at the University of British Columbia Fisheries Centre and colleagues criticized the MSC in an article in the journal Nature in 2010, saying that its standards aren’t stringent enough. The article also said that the certifiers have a financial conflict of interest, arguing that those who are lenient get more work.
In Canada, the Ecology Action Center in Halifax, Nova Scotia, said the MSC shouldn’t certify the Canadian swordfish industry because the improvements it has promised to make aren’t in place yet. The center and the Canadian conservation group David Suzuki Foundation have been calling for alternatives to longline fishing, arguing that too many sharks and sea turtles end up on the lines.

Eco label granted for swordfish caught on controversial longlines

  Consumers who buy one company’s swordfish caught off eastern Florida will see a blue and white label at the store that assures them the fish was caught with utmost care for life in the Atlantic Ocean.

The company awarded the eco label, Day Boat Seafood of Lake Park, Fla., says it’s a reward for years of working to take only fish from a healthy population. Conservationists, however, are concerned because most of the company’s swordfish are caught on surface longlines, which sometimes stretch for 30 miles, with hundreds of hooks.

“Long-line fisheries catch whatever is swimming by,” said Teri Shore of SeaTurtles.org, an advocacy group that objected to the certification by the Marine Stewardship Council (MSC). “It’s not sustainable for the oceans.”

The MSC’s certification for Day Boat Seafood, granted in December, was the first for any fish in the world caught on ocean-surface longlines.

The eastern Canadian longline swordfish industry, which is five times larger and sells mainly to the United States, is waiting for a decision, expected soon, about whether it will also get the MSC’s label.. An assessor reviewed the case of the Canadian fishery and recommended certification. An independent judge is reviewing objections.

The label is a marketing tool. Some consumers make purchase decisions based on it. Stores such as Wal-Mart, Target and Whole Foods say they intend to carry MSC-certified fish.

The MSC website says its vision is “the world’s oceans teeming with life, and seafood supplies safeguarded for this and future generations.” The MSC sets standards and grants its certification once an independent assessor determines they’re met.

Shore said that one of her biggest concerns is that the MSC doesn’t consider how the effects in different places add up.

“They look at each fishery as if no other fishery existed. That is not a sustainable perspective. That’s the problem,” she said.

Turtles and swordfish migrate between Canada and Florida. Shore said her group argued that there’s not enough information to know whether or not longlines harm sea-turtle populations.

Leatherbacks are listed as being in danger of extinction. Loggerheads are listed as threatened, which is defined as likely to become endangered in the foreseeable future.

“The bottom line from our point of view for sea-turtle protection is, after 40 years on the endangered species list, no U.S. population of sea turtles has recovered, and longline fishing remains one of the primary reasons,” Shore said.

Scott Taylor, a co-founder of Day Boat Seafood, disagreed.

“The fact of the matter is, this is really a non-issue,” he said. “It makes my blood boil.”

He said that the real problems for turtles were from loss of habitat and collisions with ships and pleasure boats.

Taylor said that his vessels have had no observed turtle deaths in the past five years.

“We do interact occasionally. A turtle will get either hooked or entangled in a line. I think there were something like 40 or 50 documented interactions over a five-year period, all of which were live releases.”

Longlines also catch swordfish that are too small to keep, as well as sharks, diving sea birds, bluefin tuna and game fish such as blue marlins. Taylor said the amount of bycatch (unintended and unwanted catch) is low. U.S. law requires each boat to keep a bycatch log and send the reports to the National Marine Fisheries Service. NMFS observers go on about 10 percent of the trips, he said.

Taylor said his company agreed to take extra measures, such as increasing the number of independent observers to verify the accuracy of its bycatch reports, to counter critics. In five years, he plans to have observers on all vessels.

About 25 percent of Day Boat’s swordfish catch is from buoy gear instead of longlines. One or two hooks are attached to each buoy. They’re watched from the boat, and each line is hauled up quickly when it has a fish on it. Longlines, by contrast, generally aren’t hauled in for eight hours or longer.

Buoy gear produces less bycatch, but fishermen don’t use it exclusively because they can’t get enough fish, Taylor said.

NMFS requires fishermen to get trained in how to release sea turtles. They also must use a type of hook that turtles are less likely to swallow. The vessels’ location must be monitored. Observers join some fishing trips to check bycatch amounts. Lines must be long enough so that if turtles are snagged they can swim to the surface to breathe. NMFS also closes some areas for protection.

“We think it has worked,” said Margo Schulze-Haugen, chief of the agency’s highly migratory species management division. Turtle losses have declined to what scientists have determined are acceptable limits, she said.

“There are many longline fisheries in the world that do not take anywhere near the care of the ecosystem that the U.S. does,” Schulze-Haugen said.

SeaTurtles.org, however, argued that not enough is known about sea turtles to certify longlines like the ones Day Boat Seafood uses as sustainable.

“While this is a small fishery, there isn’t enough observer coverage or scientific data to determine whether or not on its own it harms the sea turtle populations or not,” Shore said. One area of uncertainty, she said, is how many turtles are released alive but die as a result of being hooked.

One recent study by NMFS scientists and others, published Dec. 31 in a scientific journal, found that fewer female loggerheads nesting at Juno Beach in Florida were surviving in the ocean than previously thought. The scientists used satellite tagging to follow female loggerheads. They concluded that more studies were needed, but that if additional work verifies their findings, stronger conservation measures may be needed.

Kerry Coughlin, regional director for the Americas with the Marine Stewardship Council, said the experts involved in the certification looked closely at the issue of endangered and threatened turtles. Conservation groups made suggestions, and the company agreed to implement some of them, Coughlin said. The end result is a gain for turtles, she said.

Lee Crockett, who oversees federal fisheries policy at the Pew Environment Group, said that just because Day Boat Seafood got the eco label doesn’t mean that all longline fishing is sustainable.

“I think Day Boat is unique in the way they approach their fishing and their business practices and their commitment to do a better job,” he said.

Jennifer Jacquet of the Sea Around Us Project at the University of British Columbia Fisheries Centre and colleagues criticized the MSC in an article in the journal Nature in 2010, saying that its standards aren’t stringent enough. The article also said that the certifiers have a financial conflict of interest, arguing that those who are lenient get more work.

In Canada, the Ecology Action Center in Halifax, Nova Scotia, said the MSC shouldn’t certify the Canadian swordfish industry because the improvements it has promised to make aren’t in place yet. The center and the Canadian conservation group David Suzuki Foundation have been calling for alternatives to longline fishing, arguing that too many sharks and sea turtles end up on the lines.

Fairprice make a stand against irresponsible seafood company

As you may have heard Thern Da Seafood angered many people this week in Singapore and world with their online comment “Screw the divers! Sharks fin and mola mola will be launched at all NTUC fairprice outlets during CNY 2012”.

Fairprice have seen the light and released this coment:

Thank you everyone for your comments and for alerting us to this matter. As a standing instruction, all our suppliers are required to clear their joint promotional materials and messages with us before implementation. In this incident, the supplier had not complied with our standing instruction. We take this matter very seriously and we are withdrawing all products from Thern Da Seafood across all our stores. Sustainability is important to FairPrice and we have been relooking various policies in our commitment to be a socially responsible retailer. The sale of shark fin has been one of the areas that we have been looking into in the past few months. We are pleased to announce that we will cease the sale of shark fin products by the first quarter of this year. This is to ensure that we honour our current commitments to our partners but will no longer be placing new orders for shark fin products.

Looks like the divers won! Screw you Thern Da Seafood!

Qiaoling X-
So here’s the story for those who missed the online drama today.A local seafood supplier, Thern Da Seafood, posted this distasteful comment on their facebook page:“Screw the divers! Shark’s fin and Mola mola will also be launched at all NTUC Fairprice outlets during CNY 2012!”This was followed by much displeasure from divers and non-divers alike, generating over 200 shares and about 150 comments, without any response from the company.At around 6.40pm, the entire Thern Da Seafood facebook page was deleted but screenshots have been captured and posted herehttps://www.facebook.com/pages/Really-Screw-The-Divers-Thern-Da/153057091470154What makes me mad is how this comment is wrong in so many aspects.1. The first 3 words of the comment shows an utter disrespect to consumers and the public, regardless of whether we patronize your company or not.2. Sharks are endangered. Over 100 million sharks die every year just for their fins. Another 100 million die as by-catch of the fisheries industry. We need sharks to maintain ecological balance in the oceans!3. Thern Da markets Mola mola as a good source of collagen. First of all, all fish have collagen. Seaweed is also a source of collagen. Why not use seaweed instead if you must have collagen?However, collagen itself is not a proven skin supplement as the ingested collagen simply gets broken down during digestion. So please do not mislead the public.4. I’m pretty sure the Mola mola were wild caught as there have been no reports of captive breeding, much less farming. At present, we know precious little about the numbers, biology and fecundity of Mola molas. The IUCN conservation status of the species has not been evaluated yet. We cant put Mola mola on the mass consumer market if we dont know how it will affect the species in the wild.5. The health risk of seafood is a fact that seafood companies would gladly bury and forget about. As apex predator, sharks have high levels of heavy metals such as mercury in their tissues. Mola molas, have high levels of parasites on their skin. Fancy a bowl of mercury soup or parasite soup this CNY?6. And to NTUC Fairprice, after the recent move to promote locally-farmed fish, why take a step backwards and stock Mola mola? What ever happened to your so-called “Responsible Retailing Commitment”? What about your commitment to “Food Safety”?http://www.csr.fairprice.com.sg/responsible-retailing.htmlPerhaps you should take a leaf out of Cold Storage’s book.http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporelocalnews/view/1156624/1/.htmlSo, would you still eat shark’s fin and Mola mola this Chinese New Year?

Qiaoling X-

So here’s the story for those who missed the online drama today.

A local seafood supplier, Thern Da Seafood, posted this distasteful comment on their facebook page:
“Screw the divers! Shark’s fin and Mola mola will also be launched at all NTUC Fairprice outlets during CNY 2012!”

This was followed by much displeasure from divers and non-divers alike, generating over 200 shares and about 150 comments, without any response from the company.

At around 6.40pm, the entire Thern Da Seafood facebook page was deleted but screenshots have been captured and posted here
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Really-Screw-The-Divers-Thern-Da/153057091470154

What makes me mad is how this comment is wrong in so many aspects.
1. The first 3 words of the comment shows an utter disrespect to consumers and the public, regardless of whether we patronize your company or not.

2. Sharks are endangered. Over 100 million sharks die every year just for their fins. Another 100 million die as by-catch of the fisheries industry. We need sharks to maintain ecological balance in the oceans!

3. Thern Da markets Mola mola as a good source of collagen. First of all, all fish have collagen. Seaweed is also a source of collagen. Why not use seaweed instead if you must have collagen?
However, collagen itself is not a proven skin supplement as the ingested collagen simply gets broken down during digestion. So please do not mislead the public.

4. I’m pretty sure the Mola mola were wild caught as there have been no reports of captive breeding, much less farming. At present, we know precious little about the numbers, biology and fecundity of Mola molas. The IUCN conservation status of the species has not been evaluated yet. We cant put Mola mola on the mass consumer market if we dont know how it will affect the species in the wild.

5. The health risk of seafood is a fact that seafood companies would gladly bury and forget about. As apex predator, sharks have high levels of heavy metals such as mercury in their tissues. Mola molas, have high levels of parasites on their skin. Fancy a bowl of mercury soup or parasite soup this CNY?

6. And to NTUC Fairprice, after the recent move to promote locally-farmed fish, why take a step backwards and stock Mola mola? What ever happened to your so-called “Responsible Retailing Commitment”? What about your commitment to “Food Safety”?
http://www.csr.fairprice.com.sg/responsible-retailing.html

Perhaps you should take a leaf out of Cold Storage’s book.
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporelocalnews/view/1156624/1/.html

So, would you still eat shark’s fin and Mola mola this Chinese New Year?


127 areas to be proposed as English marine conservation zones

Much of the sea around the Isle of Wight and the Isles of Scilly , major estuaries and islets off the east coast, as well as reefs, trenches, sandbars and remote places seldom seen by humans, are included in a list of 127 sea areas that have been proposed as new nature reserves.
The zones range from a giant 5,800 sq km (2,240 sq mile) patch on the edge of British territorial waters in the western Channel to a minute 0.09 sq km speck of rock off Dorset, from the sea floor below some of the busiest shipping lanes in the world in the Channel to the muddy waters off the northern Irish coast where Dublin Bay prawn thrives.
The total area expected to be named as new nationally important marine conservation zones (MCZs) is more than 37,000 sq km – about twice the size of Wales. Nearly half the sites are off the south-west coast and in the Channel. Wales and Scotland are expected to designate other marineconservation areas later this year.

127 areas to be proposed as English marine conservation zones

Much of the sea around the Isle of Wight and the Isles of Scilly , major estuaries and islets off the east coast, as well as reefs, trenches, sandbars and remote places seldom seen by humans, are included in a list of 127 sea areas that have been proposed as new nature reserves.

The zones range from a giant 5,800 sq km (2,240 sq mile) patch on the edge of British territorial waters in the western Channel to a minute 0.09 sq km speck of rock off Dorset, from the sea floor below some of the busiest shipping lanes in the world in the Channel to the muddy waters off the northern Irish coast where Dublin Bay prawn thrives.

The total area expected to be named as new nationally important marine conservation zones (MCZs) is more than 37,000 sq km – about twice the size of Wales. Nearly half the sites are off the south-west coast and in the Channel. Wales and Scotland are expected to designate other marineconservation areas later this year.

 
Giant crabs make Antarctic leap

Up to a million king crabs are discovered on the edge of Antarctica, probably carried by warm water, raising fears for the local ecosystem.

The researchers sent the Genesis, a submersible remotely operated vehicle (ROV) from the University of Ghent in Belgium, into the Palmer Deep in March last year.
The idea was to look at what life was down there, rather than specifically to look for crabs; and the team was somewhat surprised by how many they found.

Judging by the density of the crabs and their tracks, the scientists estimate there may be 1.5 million crabs in the basin.
A female crab retrieved from the area was found to be carrying mature eggs and larvae.
“Our best guess is there was an event, or maybe more than one, where warmer water flushed up across the shelf and carried some of the larvae into the basin,” said project leader Craig Smith from the University of Hawaii.

Giant crabs make Antarctic leap

Up to a million king crabs are discovered on the edge of Antarctica, probably carried by warm water, raising fears for the local ecosystem.

The researchers sent the Genesis, a submersible remotely operated vehicle (ROV) from the University of Ghent in Belgium, into the Palmer Deep in March last year.

The idea was to look at what life was down there, rather than specifically to look for crabs; and the team was somewhat surprised by how many they found.

Judging by the density of the crabs and their tracks, the scientists estimate there may be 1.5 million crabs in the basin.

A female crab retrieved from the area was found to be carrying mature eggs and larvae.

“Our best guess is there was an event, or maybe more than one, where warmer water flushed up across the shelf and carried some of the larvae into the basin,” said project leader Craig Smith from the University of Hawaii.


I just like this

Willemien Calitz:
Driving around the island ( Saint Helena, one of the most isolated islands in the world), we kept saying how magnificently untouched and clean it is. There are barely industries and buildings, and pollution is scarce. But a shocking scene awaited us at Sandy Bay. Plastic everywhere.
Big pieces, small pieces, degraded pieces and whole pieces. The dark brown beach sand was covered in plastic that were brought in from the sea currents. We even found big tar balls on that beach. Personally I found it heartbreaking. The Saint Helenians were doing a lot to keep their island clean and natural. 
Unfortunately the bitter taste of greed and materialism has washed up on St Helena’s shores, and we simply have no choice but to prevent it from doing any more harm. It starts with you, at home.
Journal from Sea Dragons’ environmentalist voyage. Click here to read more.

Willemien Calitz:

Driving around the island ( Saint Helena, one of the most isolated islands in the world), we kept saying how magnificently untouched and clean it is. There are barely industries and buildings, and pollution is scarce. But a shocking scene awaited us at Sandy Bay. Plastic everywhere.

Big pieces, small pieces, degraded pieces and whole pieces. The dark brown beach sand was covered in plastic that were brought in from the sea currents. We even found big tar balls on that beach. Personally I found it heartbreaking. The Saint Helenians were doing a lot to keep their island clean and natural.

Unfortunately the bitter taste of greed and materialism has washed up on St Helena’s shores, and we simply have no choice but to prevent it from doing any more harm. It starts with you, at home.

Journal from Sea Dragons’ environmentalist voyage. Click here to read more.

Sea shepherd…really???

I am worried after reading a lot of posts on tumblr bigging up sea shepherd. I think that people need to really look into what they do before promoting them. Do not just watch shark water, get upset and decide sea shepherd are the only ones doing any thing about it. That’s called propaganda and is absolutely untrue.

I personally dislike sea shepherd…quite vehemently. I have been to presentations by their representatives and had to walk out due to the anger induced by the “conservationist” on stage promoting anarchistic actions that do very little, other than to upset parties who are involved in proper conservation work. Not to mention them putting the lives of both their “enemies” and volunteers in danger for what is basically a fools errand. This, believe it or not, will piss people off, making it much more difficult to try and come to political agreements that will actually help us save our oceans.

I have heard a rep flippantly ignore valid conservation questions, seen them shrug off a question regarding the scuttling of Norwegian ships and whether there were people on board or not. Perhaps this was just my experience but from what I could understand, it was all about the anarchy and VERY little about the conservation.

I understand the frustration of it seeming as tho nothing is being done, but this is because the boring policy papers and meetings aren’t as sexy as ramming a boat in the middle of the ocean. Yes it creates publicity but extremism is always wrong. 

Here is some information you won’t see on promotional videos.


The oceans are in a worse state than previously suspected, according to an expert panel of scientists.
In a new report, they warn that ocean life is “at high risk of entering a phase of extinction of marine species unprecedented in human history”.
They conclude that issues such as over-fishing, pollution and climate change are acting together in ways that have not previously been recognised.
The impacts, they say, are already affecting humanity.

The oceans are in a worse state than previously suspected, according to an expert panel of scientists.

In a new report, they warn that ocean life is “at high risk of entering a phase of extinction of marine species unprecedented in human history”.

They conclude that issues such as over-fishing, pollution and climate change are acting together in ways that have not previously been recognised.

The impacts, they say, are already affecting humanity.