Alan Smillie / Shutterstock.com
The ongoing Brexit negotiations have provided no certainty or clarity to the industry.
Gansbaai, a popular town in the Western Cape, South Africa, is battling illegal poaching.
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Breaking the cycle of illegal abalone poaching in South Africa is going to be tough, but not impossible.
Large fishing trawler at sea.
NarisaFotoSS/Shutterstock
A recent study found that 55% of the world’s oceans are fished, but a simple number can’t tell the whole story.
Brian Kinney/Shutterstock.com
An effort to increase such areas can pose a particular threat to island overseas territories.
Swordfish only – no bycatch, please.
Joe Fish Flynn/shutterstock
A new tool called EcoCast helps fishermen in the West Coast figure out where it’s best to fish that day.
Sydney’s iconic beaches are not yet part of a marine park.
John Turnbull
The New South Wales government has turned its back on plans to create sanctuary zones covering 2.4% of waters around Sydney, despite evidence that these ‘no-take’ areas are crucial for protecting fish.
In this July 2011 photo, an Inuit fisherman pulls in a fish on a sea filled with floating ice.
(AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)
A recent summit in Ottawa on what’s known as agroecology has shown that more equitable and sustainable methods of producing food are not only possible, they’re beginning to spread around the world.
Lake Victoria sees high levels of illegal fishing carried out by local fisherman and traders.
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Urgent measures need to be adopted to prevent corruption linked to illegal fishing activity in and around Lake Victoria.
Stormy seas ahead.
Simona Dibitonto/Shutterstock
Confrontation between French and British scallop fishers is a warning about the resource conflicts of the future.
Bryce Stewart
Neither country’s fishing fleet has come out of this well.
Marine parks protect fragile ecosystems, like coral reefs.
Justin Rizzari
What would you do if you saw a fisher breaking the law? Would you report the offender to the police? Confront them? Or would you do nothing? These choices affect the future of marine protected areas.
Predatory fish are among the most vulnerable species to human pressures.
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1 agosto 2018
Kendall Jones , The University of Queensland ; Alan Friedlander , University of Hawaii ; Benjamin Halpern , University of California, Santa Barbara ; Caitlin Kuempel , The University of Queensland ; Carissa Klein , The University of Queensland ; Hedley Grantham , The University of Queensland ; Hugh Possingham , The University of Queensland ; James Watson , The University of Queensland ; Nicole Shumway e Oscar Venter , University of Northern British Columbia
The world has some 500 million square kilometres of ocean. But just 55 million square kilometres remain untouched by intensive human activities such as fishing.
Portside tuna unloading from a refrigerated cargo and trading vessel (reefer) in Thailand, 2013.
Trevor Ward
The seafood industry is a major contributor to modern slavery.
The iconic hump-backed mahseer.
J. Bailey
India’s hump-backed mahseer is one of the world’s most prized game fish, yet it was a scientific enigma.
Ocean fish are changing where they live due to climate change.
Annie spratt/Unsplash
Australia’s oceans are warming faster than the global average, and fish are moving south as a result.
White spot virus is highly infectious, and can kill more than 80% of farmed prawns within days.
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It’s possible the white spot virus is now endemic in Australia - in other countries where it has broken out, it has never been eradicated.
Fishing ships in Lauwersoog, The Netherlands.
Rudmer Zwerver/Shutterstock
Seagrass meadows play a significant role in supporting world fishery productivity.
All at sea.
Alan Smillie / Shutterstock.com
Rather than becoming an independent coastal state and being able to form its own fisheries policy, the UK’s fishing industry remains beholden to EU rules.
Kondratuk Aleksei/Shutterstock.com
The tale of the snow crab bears witness to the how the complexities of climate change and fights over fishing rights play out.
Waste not, want not.
Benjamin Jones
Artisanal fishers in Sri Lanka are throwing away more marine species than they keep.