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Elisa Barahona Nieto
Secretaria General de Pesca Marítima (España)
Vol. 02 No. 04 (2007), Resources and social tools, pages 99-108
DOI: https://doi.org/10.17979/ams.2007.02.04.888
Submitted: Jul 1, 2015
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Abstract

The fishing of red tuna, Thunnus thynnus, has intensified over the last few years, especially in the Mediterranean Sea, due to the high prices red tuna meat is fetching on the Japanese market. For some time now scientists from the International Commission for the Protection of Atlantic Tuna (ICPAT) have been warning about the risk of the collapse of these catches because of over-fishing. Over the last few years, a new industrial practice has started to add to the serious problems for the protection of the stocks: the breeding and fattening of tuna in cages, which has caused an increase in the catches to be fattened and placed on the market throughout the whole year.


The negotiation of the Plan for Protection has brought with it an intensive process of consultation with the involvement of all the affected sectors. Various meetings have been held with the fishing sector implicated in order to try to incorporate their ways of looking at the problem into the negotiations, given the economic importance of the sector, although this has always been done only when this is compatible with the needs to adopt serious measures by which to guarantee the protection of this stock.

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