Good article on the Atlantic Blue Fin Tuna

Started by Bill B, November 21, 2020, 06:22:20 PM

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Bill B

It's a long article (with pictures for those of us that tend to eat crayons 🤣) but good reading. Lots of information.  Bill

https://imgur.com/gallery/iKnPE
It may not be very productive,
but it's sure going to be interesting!

alantani

send me an email at alantani@yahoo.com for questions!

foakes

Thanks, Bill —

This is an excellent bit of information — as well as very interesting.

Best, Fred
The Official, Un-Authorized Service and Restoration Center for quality vintage spinning reels.

D-A-M Quick, Penn, Mitchell, and ABU/Zebco Cardinals

--------

The first rule of fishing is to fish where the fish are. The second rule of fishing is to never forget the first rule.

"Enjoy the little things in Life — For someday, you may look back — and realize that they were the big things"
                                                     Fred O.

Tiddlerbasher


Crow

There's nothing wrong with a few "F's" on your record....Food, Fun, Flowers, Fishing, Friends, and Fun....to name just a few !

Wompus Cat

Quote from: foakes on November 21, 2020, 06:54:33 PM
Thanks, Bill —

This is an excellent bit of information — as well as very interesting.

Best, Fred

I am trying to get the page  to  open .It is blank for some reason .
My confuser may be low on Propane ............. I dunno
If a Grass Hopper Carried a Shotgun then the Birds wouldn't MESS with Him

oc1

Tuna are so wide ranging that, from a regulatory perspective, they are similar to whales.  They swim through many jurisdictions as well as open ocean so they can only be managed through international commissions and agreements.  As with whaling, it is almost impossible to get half of world to agree on a management scheme for tuna at the same time.  Differences of opinion among nations and maneuvering to get their share of the pie results in ineffective or no management.  That is a big part of why tuna are going extinct before our eyes.  Everyone is part of the problem but nobody wants to be part of the solution.

Paleontologists are finding that Neandertal man started catching large tuna in the Straits of Gibraltar 42,000 years ago.  Let's now screw it up now.
-steve