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Curb the Overfishing of Red Snapper Now for a Future of Plenty

A A Aerial View of La Cusinga.jpg
Still Wild Coast in Costa Rica (photo courtesy of La Cuisinga Lodge)

Red snapper was long one of my favorite meals. The unique flavor always brings a fond memory of dining on it within a couple of hours of seeing it caught from a beach in Costa Rica with a simple rod and reel. I regarded it as a delicacy, but for the local residents it was a naturally plentiful seafood.

I gave up red snapper well over a year ago after reading that it was being seriously overfished, hoping it would some day return to abundance. Unfortunately, I just learned from the nonprofit Care2 that “…government assessments from 2008 show that the species is being overfished at eight times the sustainable level.” The population has dwindled to just 3% of its historic levels.

The good news is that the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council is working on new rules that should enable red snapper to make a big comeback. Our friends at Care2 write, “In less than 10 years, the population of red snapper would skyrocket -- and with it, so could catches of the species. Scientific projections suggest that it could be as high as a 25-fold increase, from 78,000 pounds of fish in 2006 to nearly 2 million pounds by 2036.”

Regretfully, “The red snapper's not the only species at risk; the speckled hind, warsaw grouper, golden tilefish, snowy grouper, black grouper, black sea bass, gag, red grouper and vermilion snapper are all at risk.”

The time for environmental action is now, so Care2 is asking for some grassroots help. They are collecting signatures in support of changes to fishing rules so populations have time to replenish themselves. They need thousands of signatures by November 22nd in order to hand-deliver them to the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council as part of a public comment period.

To learn more about the issue and add your signature in support of the rule changes go to: Save a Snapper

To view previous posts on the topic of Conservation scroll down after you go to: American Feast's Posts on Conservation

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Comments

Over the past 50 years, 90 percent of large fish in the world's oceans have disappeared. We are overfishing ourselves to death. It's bad for the environment, bad for species, bad for jobs, and bad for the economy, yet still we keep doing it.

http://www.selfdestructivebastards.com/2009/11/overfishing.html

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