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Harry Krause wrote:
JimH wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message . .. JimH wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message . .. JimH wrote: But thanks to the excessive catches by commercial fisherman on Lake Erie walleye and yellow perch may also soon face the same fate, this time not to pollution, although we are seeing new water quality problems on the Lake that we did not see in past decades. Excessive catches by commercial fishermen are hurting sportfishing almost everywhere along the US east, west, and gulf coasts, but I had no idea it was a problem in the inland lakes, too. A big part of the problem for us: the foreign fishing fleets with their gargantuan ships that literally suck all the fish out of certain sections of the ocean. Overfishing is a real problem, and I have no idea what the answers might be. Commercial fishing in the US waters of Lake Erie results in the catch of 9.5 million pounds of yellow perch annually. Commercial fishing for walleye in US waters is banned. There were a series of indictments against commercial fishing companies for their under reporting catches of yellow perch from 2001 to 2003 by over 100 million pounds. Canada takes out 3.4 million pounds of yellow perch and 7 million pounds of walleye annually from Lake Erie. Commercial fishing in Lake Erie was the result of the blue pike becoming extinct. I'm not sure I understand why non-farm grown fish, which, in reality, belong to all of us and none of us, should be harvested commercially. Maine lobsters, for example, are mostly grown in holding pens these days, although there are many lobstermen who still use individual traps. But these rugged individuals are NOT hauling up tons and tons of lobsters with every haul, and their catches are closely regulated. There was 400 million pounds of fish taken by commercial fishermen out of the port of Reedville, Virginia, second highest of all major US coastal ports: http://www.st.nmfs.gov/pls/webpls/MF..._YEARP.RESULTS New Bedford, Massachusetts ranks number one for total dollar value of the catch: http://www.st.nmfs.gov/pls/webpls/MF..._YEARD.RESULTS An interesting site: http://www.st.nmfs.gov/st1/commercial/ \ But that's the whole point. Non-farmed fish is not a resource that "belongs" to the commercial fishermen. Who does it belong to, why does it belong to them and what is the basis of their claim to ownership? Your answer can open up a can of worms that will lay yourself open to a charge of being a hypocrite, again. |
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