The good news is that the
riverine states in Eastern Europe are now
doing the things necessary to preserve sturgeon stocks.
I expect that in time the
sturgeon will become an important source of farmed fish. The methodology was worked out just before the
USSR
collapsed and about now would be a good time to get serious.
Importantly, it specializes in a
food niche that does not detract from other fisheries at all.
I also think non migratory Russian
sturgeon is especially suited to Canadian boreal forest lake fisheries along
with a nonmigratory Coho salmon stock recently developed. A selective fall harvest combined with winter
feeding for the Coho should produce a sustainable high volume fishery
throughout Canada ’s
massive lake system quite sufficient to millions of tons of fish for the global
market.
In the meantime another commons
fishery is now coming under control.
WWF welcomes first
by Staff Writers
Sofia (AFP) May 2, 2011
http://www.seeddaily.com/reports/WWF_welcomes_first_Bulgaria_ban_on_Danube_sturgeon_fishing_999.html
The environmental group WWF welcomed on Monday
The WWF welcomed the one-year ban, imposed in March, as "a great
step" to help save the species.
"Danube sturgeons, the ancient migratory fish that
are today teetering on the brink of extinction due to overfishing because of
their valuable caviar, have new hope for survival," it said in a statement.
The ban was the first restriction on sturgeon fishing on the Bulgarian
side of the Danube , and the country's
Fisheries and Aquaculture Agency has said it plans to impose a further
five-year ban in 2012.
Neighbouring Romania
already imposed a 10-year moratorium on sturgeon catching in April 2006.
But this one-sided ban could not have any impact if fishermen across
the river in Bulgaria
were still catching sturgeons, the WWF said.
The Black Sea is the second largest sturgeon fishery in the world after
the Caspian Sea, and the Danube upstream is
one of the most important spawning habitats for giant Belugasturgeons.
The ancient fish, which outlasted the dinosaurs, has been critically
endangered by overfishing for its caviar, which can cost over 6,000 euros
(8,900 dollars) per kilogramme, the WWF said.
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