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Overfishing significantly depletes ocean wildlife populations. Here's why it's a problem, and solutions to reduce fishing's environmental impact and maintain vital sources of food and livelihoods.
- Bycatch
Bycatch—the incidental capture of non-target species during...
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- Arctic
The Arctic, including the Bering, Beaufort and Chukchi seas,...
- Illegal Fishing
Illegal fishing is a key driver of global overfishing, it...
- Albacore Tuna
Albacore is one of the smaller tuna species, reaching sizes...
- Bluefin Tuna
Stopping Overfishing . In the Mediterranean, WWF has been...
- Bycatch
Overfished: this is sometimes termed ‘overexploited’. A fish stock with abundance below the biomass that would produce the maximum sustainable yield (MSY) is potentially considered "overfished". Fish stocks become overexploited when fish are caught at a rate higher than the fish population can support.
21 Νοε 2020 · More than one-third of global fish stocks are being overfished. Every year, $22 billion is spent to subsidize overfishing, which overexploits the ocean's resources and puts food and job security at risk. This environmental and social justice issue can be stopped by eliminating harmful fisheries subsidies.
17 Φεβ 2016 · It means changes to fishing technology and behaviour that will see fewer non-target marine species like sharks, rays, turtles and dolphins killed during the course of catching tuna. It also means more rigorous auditing of fish catches, so that stocks are not overfished to the point of collapse.
7 Φεβ 2022 · Today, over a third of global stocks are overfished, posing a threat to biodiversity and throwing ecosystems dangerously out of balance.
8 Οκτ 2019 · As global fish stocks that feed hundreds of millions of people dwindle, nations are scrambling to finalize by year’s end an international agreement to ban government subsidies that fuel...
16 Ιαν 2019 · The world’s oceans are not empty space: they are constantly being shaped by politics, policies and people. Overfishing, marine pollution, aquaculture, deep-sea mining, conservation and other human activities in the ocean are increasing, and decisions about these issues are guided by powerful actors and organizations.