Endangered Atlantic bluefin tuna formally recommended for international trade ban
That Atlantic bluefin tuna stocks are declining dramatically was confirmed last week by scientists for the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) – the organization responsible for ensuring the sustainable commercial exploitation of this fish – at their annual meeting in Madrid, Spain.
“WWF applauds Monaco for officially proposing today a halt to international trade in this endangered and alarmingly overexploited species – an act that would cut the main driver of decline,” said Dr Sergi Tudela, Head of Fisheries at WWF Mediterranean.
“WWF now appeals to all CITES Contracting Parties to vote for the trade ban proposal. The current management regime is a total failure and is inadequate to guarantee the recovery of this iconic species – only a stop to global trade can give bluefin tuna the breather it so desperately needs.”
A CITES Appendix I listing would ban international commercial trade in wild Atlantic bluefin tuna.
In their report of Friday, the ICCAT scientists highlighted that the fishery had been plagued with serious underreporting and illegal fishing from the 1990s – undermining the conservation of the stock – and that further stock collapse is likely unless fishing mortality rates are substantially reduced in the near future.
Parallel to the CITES trade ban, WWF is calling on ICCAT to suspend fishing of Atlantic bluefin tuna when it meets 6-16 November in Recife, Brazil – with the ultimate goal of a sustainable fishery successfully managed by ICCAT in future.
The 175 CITES Contracting Parties will vote on the listing proposal when they next meet in Doha, Qatar, 13-25 March 2010, where a two-thirds majority will confirm the global trade ban.
For more information
Gemma Parkes, +39 346 387 3237, gparkes@wwfmedpo.org


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