#Trawling

Joseph Lim :mastodon:joseph11lim
2025-06-16

How 's will get
🧐"bottom hv been working at for more than a century, but nobody had ever seen tis scene before. No diver wld survive where te were.. It is a nightmare vision of & ..
The worst of it is tt while the goal is to have 30% of the world’s in ‘maritime protected areas’ by 2030, most of those still allow ."

saltwire.com/newfoundland-labr

2025-06-09

This is very welcome. We need to ban it in ALL of our waters now.

#BottomTrawling #Fishing #Trawling #Wildlife #Oceans

Campaigners hail plan to ban bottom trawling in half of England’s protected seas | Fishing | The Guardian
theguardian.com/environment/20

Dennis ADharmaDog
2025-05-29


"Ocean with David Attenborough airs Sunday 8 June at 8 pm on National Geographic and streams the same day on Disney+, and is available in select cinemas now."

See the petition to end bottom trawling in Marine Protected Areas. 👇

End Bottom Trawling in MPAs – Revive Our Ocean
reviveourocean.org/end-bottom-

Dennis ADharmaDog
2025-05-29


"Ocean with David Attenborough airs Sunday 8 June at 8 pm on National Geographic and streams the same day on Disney+, and is available in select cinemas now."

Ocean with David Attenborough | Never-Before-Seen Bottom Trawling Footage | National Geographic
youtu.be/KkD8itD9mbo?si=XtZQXx

Dennis ADharmaDog
2025-05-29


"Ocean with David Attenborough airs Sunday 8 June at 8 pm on National Geographic and streams the same day on Disney+, and is available in select cinemas now."

“This Hit Me In The Guts”: World-First Footage Shows Fish Swimming For Their Lives As Trawlers Close In

“This is something that doesn't have to happen in our marine protected areas. It could end tomorrow, if we choose it to, and it would be...".
iflscience.com/devastating-imp

Benjamin Carr, Ph.D. 👨🏻‍💻🧬BenjaminHCCarr@hachyderm.io
2025-05-29

Devastating Impact Of #Trawling Revealed In World-First Footage Of Marine Animals Fleeing Nets
“This is something that doesn't have to happen in our #marineprotectedareas. It could end tomorrow, if we choose it to, and it would be to the benefit of every living thing on the planet,” director Toby Nowlan told IFLScience.
"This hit me in the guts. Being at the level of the net and seeing all these poor creatures trying to escape the net."-Enric Sala
iflscience.com/devastating-imp
archive.ph/2vAQm

Devastating Impact Of Trawling Revealed In World-First Footage Of Marine Animals Fleeing Nets

“This is something that doesn't have to happen in our marine protected areas. It could end tomorrow, if we choose it to, and it would be to the benefit of every living thing on the planet”

A 2017 study published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that #trawling the #ocean floor can strip it of up to 41 percent of the seabed fauna, a loss in #biodiversity that can take over six years to recover. Around a quarter of all wild-caught #seafood is caught using trawlers each year, giving you an idea of the scale of this destruction, but it goes further still.

In fact, the damage we are doing to the seas is even visible from space. You see, each time a #trawler descends its net and charges across the seabed, it stirs up billowing plumes of sediment, creating trails of devastation that have been photographed in #satellite imagery. Some sediment trails span tens of kilometers, and each marks the destruction of an ecosystem that can take years to recover.

iflscience.com/devastating-imp

Emus for EntropyPeteGozz@theblower.au
2025-05-07

“After almost 100 years on the planet, I now understand the most important place on Earth is not on land, but at sea,”
-- Sir David Attenborough

This bloke is not only a Legend but is a genuine Global Treasure.

oceanographicmagazine.com/news
“If we save the ocean, we save ourselves,” says Sir David who this weekend admitted in an exclusive interview with The Times that he “won’t get to see the ocean’s recovery and restoration” but that the ‘young children seen playing on the beach today’ very well may do. At the very least, they will get to witness “perhaps the most consequential time for the human species in the past 10,000 years.”

*This glorious bloke plants many trees for distant children to shelter and pause under.*

#Ocean #Earth #Climate #Water #Hope

#Trawling has "history" stretching back to (at least) the fourteenth century. (apparently) By 1600 it was widespread and practiced large distances from shore.

Attempts have been made to control its damage since the #Tudors

Glyn Moodyglynmoody
2025-05-01

Attenborough at 99: naturalist ‘goes further than before’ to speak out against industrial fishing in new film - theguardian.com/environment/20 "The celebrated presenter warns of ‘modern day colonialism at sea’ as he highlights the destruction caused by and bottom " a true hero; UK gov should listen

2025-03-25

Bottom trawling in European waters costs society up to €11bn a year, new study finds.

A first-of-its-kind study released today found that this cost is largely due to carbon dioxide emissions from disturbed sediments on the seafloor.

The study is the first to measure the full economic cost of bottom trawling in European waters - including the EU, UK, Norway and Iceland.

mediafaro.org/article/20250325

#Seabed #CarbonEmissions #Carbon #Trawling #Sea #Ocean #Fishing #Europe #EU #UK #Norway #Iceland

Arno VanderbekeAV@toot.io
2025-03-19

The #Ocean faces increasing threats from human activities. At the #UN Ocean Conference 2025, we urge governments to:

1. Ban offshore #oil and #gas exploration and phase out existing #fossil fuel extraction;
2. Reduce vessel speed to protect #whales;
3. Ban destructive fisheries eg bottom #trawling;
4. End #plastic pollution, addressing the full life cycle of plastic;
5. Ban deep-sea #mining
6. Protect marine habitats and enforce #conservation measures.

action.wemove.eu/sign/2024-6-b

2025-03-06

_The Evening Post_, 7 March 1925:
THE OYSTER SEASON
FIRST CATCH LANDED
HOW THE TRAWLERS WORK
An excellent haul of “the first #oysters of the season” was made by the #Bluff #trawling fleet on Tuesday last, a total of four small steamers being engaged in the task, and returning to port laden with luscious bivalves.
The fleet made for the main oyster beds between Dog Island and the island of Ruapuke. These beds are always tried out at the first of the season, for they lie in shallow water … and it has been found that the shallow water oysters are the best, being hard-shalled [sic], large, and plump. The sea-floor of Foveaux Strait is covered from the western to the eastern extremity with huge oyster beds.…
The beds having been reached after 1½ hours steaming, the crew of five men on each boat commenced the serious work of the day. The boats began to steam slowly up against the tide at four knots per hour, and the dredging gear was got ready. There are two dredges on each boat—one forward arid one aft. They are worked both on the same side of the boat, and are slung over the side on half-inch wire rope running through derricks attached to the fore and mizzen masts.…
[A detailed description follows]
paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/news
#OnThisDay #OTD #PapersPast #Fishing #Southland #FoveauxStrait #NewZealand

Black-and-white photo: At the Bluff. 1910s–1920s. Photographer, Frederick George Radcliffe. Description: Looking over to Bluff from the old Bluff Wharf showing the circular quay out to the wharf with yachts and dinghies berthed next to it (across centre), the premises of Urwin and Roderique’s Oyster Merchants (right of centre), and storage sheds in the midground and Gore Street, the Post Office on the corner of Lee Street, the railway station (centre left) and the Presbyterian Church in the background, partly obscured. Citation: Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections 35-R0268. https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/photos/id/276425Black-and-white photo: The opening of the oyster season in the South Island. 1921. Description: A net full of shellfish being hauled aboard a trawler in Foveaux Strait. Two men are working in the foreground, one of them wearing a dark coat and cap. Citation: Supplement to the Auckland Weekly News, 19 May 1921, p. 42. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections AWNS-19210519-42-02. https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/photos/id/242070Black-and-white photo: Throwing over the old oyster shells after a haul: a scene on one of the trawlers in Foveaux Strait. 1921. Description: Old oyster shells being thrown overboard from a trawler in Foveaux Strait. Citation: Supplement to the Auckland Weekly News, 19 May 1921, p. 42. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections AWNS-19210519-42-03. https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/photos/id/242071
Thor A. Hoplandhopland@snabelen.no
2025-02-20

@futurebird this is also a problem in #Norway. Nobody's talking about the over #fishing or the #trawling off the coast that is destroying reefs, or even the fish farms in #Norwegian #fjords that are dumping massive amounts of #antibiotics into the water - because fish farms are havens for bacteria and viruses.

But some Spanish or Portuguese boats come up to take away quota from Norwegian companies? RABBLE, RABBLE, RABBLE!

People are greedy idiots sometimes.

Bob Paynerjpayne
2025-01-09
2024-11-08

_The Evening Post_, 9 November 1923:
SEA FISHERIES
ADDITIONAL SAFEGUARDS
The development of the #fishing industry in New Zealand waters has been considerable in recent years, so considerable, in fact, that the Marine Department is finding it necessary to take additional precautions to ensure that the regulations are observed. It has been found that breaches have been occurring in some parts of the Dominion, and this has led to the reorganisation of the system of sea #fisheries inspection and the appointment of more #inspectors. Certain limits are prescribed within which #trawling may be carried out, and the fresh appointments have been made with the view to more efficiently safeguarding the interests of sea fisheries generally.
paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/news

#OnThisDay #OTD #PapersPast #Regulation #Wellington #NewZealand

Black-and-white photo montage: The Harvest of the Sea: Trawling Operations in Palliser Bay, Wellington. 1921. Description: Various scenes of men working at commercial trawling operations. Captions of each photo:1. Man splicing rope 2. Cook peeling potatoes. 3. Hauling in the trawl nets. 4. A Moki fish. 5. Whipping or binding the end of the rope. 6. A porcupine fish. 7. Mending the trawling nets. 8. Fixing the board for the trawl nets to rest on. 9. Bag of the trawl hauled on ship. 10. A varied catch. 11.Hauling in . 12. Casing up the fish. 13. The fish being cleaned. 14. Placing the spoil in cases. 15. Oiling the block and tackle. 16. Mending the net. Citation: Supplement to the Auckland Weekly News, 3 March 1921, p. 39. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections AWNS-19210303-39-01. https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/photos/id/242508Black-and-white photo: Inspector of Fisheries launch, Alice. 1921. Caption: On Her Trials Last Week at Auckland: The New Launch, the Alice, Which Has Been Built for the Use of the Inspector of Fisheries in the Bay of Islands. Description: Shows the launch motoring in a harbour; four men are standing near the stern. Citation: Supplement to the Auckland Weekly News, 29 September 1921, p. 31. Auckland Libraries Heritage Collections AWNS-19210929-31-04. https://kura.aucklandlibraries.govt.nz/digital/collection/photos/id/241349
2024-10-25

24-Oct-2024
When we disturb the seabed, we get more and increase the risk of oxygen depletion
A new study from Aarhus University shows that disturbances of the seabed from equipment and can lead to a series of negative consequences for both the marine and the global ecosystem.

eurekalert.org/news-releases/1

2024-09-30

NGOs take France to court over trawling in Mediterranean 'protected' marine areas

France currently allows highly destructive fishing methods such as #BottomTrawling in so-called ‘protected’ marine areas in the Mediterranean, despite a Europe-wide ban

BLOOM and ClientEarth are filing a lawsuit in the Administrative Court of Paris to ensure that France finally complies with laws to protect the Mediterranean

clientearth.org/latest/press-o

#ProtectTheOcean #Oceans #Fishing #Environment #BioDiversity #BioDiversityLoss #Trawling

Alaska Native NewsAKNativeNews
2024-09-28

King Salmon Bycatch Reached in Gulf, Polluck Fishery Shut Down for Year
Crewmembers haul full bag of pollock aboard. Image-NOAA

[the_ad id="30587"]

This week the federal government shut down the harvest of all polluck in the Gulf of Alast after two fishing vessels took over 2,000 chinook from the region as bycatch.

The news drew immediate...
alaska-native-news.com/king-sa

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