Pacific Bluefin Tuna Population Has Dropped By 96 Percent

Monday, January 14, 2013 - 12:30 in Biology & Nature

Pacific Prey Wikimedia Commons The dark side of sushi's surge in popularity. For the Pacific bluefin tuna, sitting at the popular kids' table sure isn't paying off. The stock of the fish is at historically low levels and is being dangerously overfished, a new report shows. Fisheries scientists from the International Scientific Committee to Study the Tuna and Tuna-Like Species of the North Pacific Ocean estimate that the Pacific bluefin population has declined from its unfished level by more than 96 percent. The report warns that stock levels likely won't improve by extending the current fishing levels. All the world's scrombrids -- a family that includes tunas and mackerels -- are on the endangered list. One problem is the majority of bluefin fishermen are snagging fish are under a year old, further hindering the species' chance to procreate. But the extreme lack of supply isn't deterring many buyers. If anything,...

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