hey marine critter fans, please consider signing a petition to ban bottom trawling in New Zealand (the home of yours truly)
Jono Ridler is swimming the length of the NZ North Island (about 1400km), no wetsuit or anything, to raise awareness. A few hours swimming, then a few hours to sleep/eat, and repeat. We are currently at almost 1200km! He's been going since January.
The petition is going strong too and we would all appreciate if you would consider adding your name :)
Started drawing blobfish and tripped over this soapbox. Who put that there?
I find that a lot of people who make cheeky posts about what living blobfish look like tend to not mention how the typically inedible blobfish is getting pulled up from the deepest depths of the sea in the first place. The new documentary “Ocean” with David Attenborough provides a chilling underwater look at a trawling net in action. You can watch a clip here. And you can find a link to Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Seafood Watch here.
Lost or discarded fishing nets present a grave threat to marine life. But teams of volunteer divers are determined to retrieve this ‘ghost g
Ghost fishing gear – meaning abandoned, lost or discarded nets, pots or lines – is particularly problematic because it continues to catch marine life. Crabs, rays, fish and even birds or larger mammals such as seals and dolphins get trapped in the gear, where they inevitably die and become bait for more marine life. And so the cycle continues.
According to a 2016 United Nations report, each fishing vessel is likely to lose 1% of its fishing gear per year. More staggering still is the stat that for in every square kilometre of fishing ground there are likely to be 4.4km of ghost nets.
Ghost Fishing UK was set up in 2015 by Dr Richard Walker, a scientist and technical dive instructor. Walker was inspired by his time joining Dutch divers from the now defunct Ghost Fishing Foundation, to clean up ghost nets in the North Sea, in Croatia and from first world war wrecks in Scapa Flow, Orkney.
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It currently has more volunteers than vacancies. [Ghost Fishing UK] estimates there are 300 on the waiting list, drawn to the charity through word of mouth among the dive community. The selection process is rigorous, with technical dive skills prioritised. Divers tend to self-fund their trips, though the organisation also receives support from private donations and from conservation organisations including the Sussex Wildlife Trust, World Animal Protection and the Sea LifeTrust. People can help by donating to support the charity’s work, and by reporting ghost gear via a form on its website.
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Tom Collinson is senior advocacy manager at Blue Ventures, a charity that seeks to restore the world’s oceans and improve the livelihoods of fishing communities. He is enthusiastically supportive of the work done by Ghost Fishing UK and other likeminded organisations, such as the Scottish Creel Fishermen’s Federation and the Global Ghost Gear Initiative. “Ghost fishing gear presents a unique and complex challenge and if it weren’t for these dedicated groups, our reefs and wrecks would be festering under blankets of nylon and dead marine life,” he says.
But he also cautions that benefits these groups bring are tiny relative to “industrial destructive fishing practices and particularly bottom trawling”. Critics liken the latter to using a bulldozer and then a vacuum cleaner on the ocean floor.
Welcome to the Scottish Creel Fishermen's Federation (SCFF) website. SCFF is the national trade association for the creel fishing industry,
My thesis argues for effective no-take zones and other conservation measures to fight against pollution, industrialized overfishing, and (as shown above) bottom trawling.
Thank you Spain for just doing the right thing. 🇪🇸
No more heavy trawls scraping the seabed. No more constant pressure on the surrounding fragile fish and coral. This helps the dolphins there survive too.
This expansion means 22.45% of Spain's waters are now protected, a huge step toward the EU's goal to reach 30% by 2030. 🌊👏🏼👏🏼🌊
The Mediterranean Sea is in crisis. Once a thriving spot for biodiversity, it is now the most overfished sea in the world and, according to the WWF, is "on the verge of burnout."
Why? Bottom trawling—a destructive fishing method where nets are dragged along the seabed, catching or destroying everything in their path.
For our 21st Planet Wild mission, we're supporting a beautiful and effective method to stop bottom trawling and protect marine life: an underwater sculpture museum.
Many thanks to the five selected artists who donated their work to the museum: Nikolas Maniatakos, Maria Grazia Collini, Abdulkadir Hocaoglu, Stefano Corti, and Giacomo Bernardi.
A special thanks to Greenpeace, Camilla Salghetti, Barbara Farnetani and Santiago Burin Des Roziers for providing us with additional footage.