Home News Weather Finance Travel Maps Movies Lottery Horoscopes Games
 SECTION: NEWS COVERING INDUSTRY
Search The Web:
DOMAIN NAMES
AS LOW AS $2.99 / YR.
Critics: Shark Fishing Nations Fail Pledge
Thursday, 27-Jan-2011 7:44PM United Press International
USTINET NEWS

 » Front Page

 » Top Stories

 » U.S.

 » World

 » Politics

 » Business

    Front Page

    Industires

    Labor & Unions

    World Econmony

 » Sports

 » Health

 » Tech/Science

 » Living/Entertainment

 » Off Beat Stories

 » News Photos

 » Weather


Special Editions

 » Iraq & Conflict

 » Israel/Palestine

 » Crimes & Laws


MultiMedia

 » Interactive Features

 » News Photos


POLL: Your Opinion

 » What Do You Think




LONDON, Jan. 27 (UPI) -- Many countries whose fishing fleets take large numbers of sharks have failed to meet a pledge on conserving the species, a wildlife advocacy group says.

SAVE MONEY ON TRAVEL DEALS

The wildlife trade monitoring network Traffic and the Pew Environment Group say most of the main shark fishing nations are failing in monitoring the activities of their shark fishing fleets, the BBC reported Thursday.

Governments are supposed to "encourage full utilization of dead sharks" but many fishing fleets are targeting just shark fins for use in shark fin soup in great demand in China, discarding the "finned" sharks back into the ocean to die.

Sharks are particularly vulnerable to overfishing because they live long lives and reproduce slowly, experts say.

Nations involved in shark fishing agreed in 2001 to identify and protect key habitats, ensure catches were sustainable, and minimize waste and discards.

But little has been done to keep to the agreement, critics say.

"The fate of the world's sharks is in the hands of the top 20 shark catchers, most of which have failed to demonstrate what, if anything, they are doing to save these imperiled species", Glenn Sant, leader of Traffic's global marine program, said. "They need to take action to stop the decline in shark populations, and help ensure that the list of species threatened by overfishing does not continue to grow."

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Related News Topics:

Environment, pollution, endangered species
General science stories
Agriculture, fishing, forestry
Top science, technical and computer stories
News of the UK
Miscellaneous science and technology stories
General science stories
News covering industry
News of Europe
News of the British Isles

 BREAKING STORIES

Report on toy sales: Wind it up, sell it

Crude oil prices top $89

Gold makes gains with equities down

Italian autoworkers strike against Fiat

CBOT lower on Egypt unrest

FDIC charges banker with loan misconduct

Allstate: Virgos have most crashes

BofA protests Nevada injunction

Digital topped paperbacks at Amazon

Report: Egyptians move money from turmoil

Russian icebreaker rescue near success

Cameron outlines vision for recovery

Brazil plans free homes for flood victims

U.S. alfalfa decision faces court threat

Britain unveils plan to lease public woods

Brazil gives go-ahead to controversial dam

Critics: Shark fishing nations fail pledge

N.J. mayor charged with insurance fraud

Woman claims yogurt sample tasted of semen

Bank sues Brink's over $64,500 in coins

Home News Weather Finance Travel Maps Movies Lottery Horoscopes Games
Home :: My Page :: My WebMail :: My Calendar :: My Portfolio :: Chat :: Help Center :: Sign In :: Sign Out

MY.USTI.NET PORTAL  -  © 1996 - 2004 USTINET CORPORATION. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Please see our Privacy Policy, Security Guarantee, Terms of Use for additional information.