you seem to think that the fisheries up north only impact our fish, did you know that we have fisheries that impact there fish ?
• 2 (a) FINDINGS.—Congress makes the following
• 3findings:
• 4 (1) Several species of salmon native to the rivers
• 5 of the United States are highly migratory, interacting
• 6 with salmon originating from Canada, Japan,
• 7 Russia, and South Korea and spending portions of
• 8 their life history outside of the territorial waters of
• 9 the United States. Recognition of the migratory and
• 10 trans boundary nature of salmon species has led
• 11 countries of the North Pacific to seek enhanced co
• 12ordination and cooperation through multilateral and
• 13 bi-lateral agreements.
This brings up by catch, poaching and 10’s of thousands of miles of old parts of ghost drift nets in the ocean of old fisheries brought up earlier in this thread.
Just because you don’t see it doesn’t mean it isn’t happening. Out of sight----- out of mind.
1)bycatch documented and nondocumented
http://www.fakr.noaa.gov/sustainablefisheries/inseason/chinook_salmon_mortality.pdfLarge amount of documented chinook caught . Reports of 130 other species involved in by catch not documented with numbers..
2)poaching
I. Twelve hundred metric tons (2.64 million pounds) of illegal salmon and steelhead were eventually smuggled to three companies in Japan. The Japanese government informed the U.S. that one of the companies involved received a "substantial fine" .
How many more operations are going on not caught? What % of drug smugglers are caught?
3)old discarded drift nets
It has been asserted that lost and discarded sections of driftnet ball up fairly quickly and cease to ghost fish in a short period of time (Mio, Domon, Yoshida, and Matsumura 1990). Although monofilament driftnet fragments may eventually form a loose ball, they frequently trail long streamers of torn net and continue to ensnare animals attracted to the floating mass. A two kilometer section of driftnet can form a mass more than seven meters in diameter (Hayworth pers. comm. 1991). Much evidence exists to indicate these tangled masses of net continue to ghost fish for long periods, both on the surface (Gooder 1989; Ignell, Bailey, and Joyce 1986; von Brandt 1984; Degange and Newby 1980) and on the bottom
fragments may continue to entrap animals for years, including populations
well within the 200-mi exclusive economic zone (EEZ) and territorial waters
of the United States.