From: 
<http://www.seacoastonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070827/NEW 
S/708270327/-1/NEWS09&sfad=1>SeaCoastOnline.com, Aug. 27, 2007 
<http://www.precaution.org/lib/07/prn_tuna_declining.070827.htm>[Print 
er-friendly version]

Study: Tuna On The Decline

Over-fishing, global climate change blamed

Durham, N.H. (AP) -- The number and quality of giant bluefin tuna are 
declining in the Gulf of Maine, endangering the popular catch, 
according to University of New Hampshire researchers.

Their study does not pinpoint why the number of bluefins is falling 
dramatically or why the remaining fish are getting slimmer, but the 
researchers suspect a number of factors, including over-fishing from 
European countries in the Eastern Atlantic and the Mediterranean Sea 
and shifts in migration and foraging patterns due to global warming.

In the mid-1990s, UNH scientists documented 500 to 900 schools of 
bluefin tuna in the Gulf of Maine averaging 100 to 150 fish each, 
said Molly Lutcavage, director of UNH's Large Pelagics Research 
Center. She said only a "few" schools would be seen in today's waters.

"The horrifying reality is that the huge decline in abundance 
happened so quickly," she said.

The toll is evident in the number of commercial tuna fishing permits, 
said Rich Ruais, executive director of the East Coast Tuna 
Association, who estimates that in the mid-1990s, there were 15,000 
permits from Maine down to Texas, where today there are about 4,400.

With relatively low fishing quotas strictly enforced in the Western 
Atlantic, many point to Eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean fishermen 
for the decline in stocks.

Atlantic bluefin tuna are known for being highly migratory, with 
spawning grounds in the Gulf of Mexico and the Mediterranean. Tagging 
from UNH scientists has shown the fish travel long distances, often 
mixing with stocks in the Eastern Atlantic.

Bob Campbell, of Yankee Fisherman's Co-Op in Seabrook, kept track in 
a log book of the 3,082 bluefin tuna he handled, providing the 
researchers a unique record of their numbers and quality.

"In a drawer, he had two or three notebooks with every fish he graded 
in the last 14 years, from 1991 to 2004," said UNH graduate student 
Walter Golet. Golet's findings corroborated observations by 
fishermen, brokers and cooperative managers that the quality and 
quantity are declining.

Golet's research showed that a fish caught in September 1991 had only 
a 9 percent chance of being a C+ grade, with A being the highest, 
based in part on fat content. In contrast, a fish caught in September 
2004, even after a season of feeding in the Gulf of Maine, had a 76 
percent chance of being a C+.

The fat content is not just important for taste. The researchers say 
it's an indicator of the overall health of the bluefin and of its 
future.

"One of the big consequences of not fattening as much is the 
potential impact it could have on reproduction," Golet said. "Reduced 
energy stores can often force a fish to skip spawning in a particular 
year."


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