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Only a third of UK’s key fish populations are not overfished

UC Davis researchers found plastic fragments and textile fibers in 25 percent of fish sold in Indonesian and California markets.

First post-Brexit audit finds of the top 10 UK stocks, only three are in ‘a healthy state’.

Only a third of the UK’s key fish populations are in a healthy state, and catches of key species such as cod should be reduced this year as the UK negotiates fishing rights with the EU, according to the first post-Brexit assessment of the UK’s fisheries.

Of the top 10 stocks on which the UK’s fishing industry relies, only three – mackerel in the north-east Atlantic, haddock in the North Sea, and langoustines in the west of Scotland – are in a healthy state and not overfished, according to an audit of 104 stocks by the charity Oceana.

Catches of cod in the North Sea should be reduced substantially, by about 13 to 16%, the group said, and no cod at all should be fished in the Celtic Sea, if stocks are to be saved from severe depletion.

Herring, whiting and blue whiting are also showing signs of strain and should be given more chance to recover, according to the report. Of shellfish, scallops in the eastern English channel and crab in the southern North Sea were also found to be overfished.

Melissa Moore, head of UK policy at Oceana, told the Guardian that reductions in catches now would yield benefits in the future. “You end up with more fish, so you can reap the benefits in three to five years,” she said. “That’s what has been done with haddock, through following the science.”

She called for ministers, who have begun fishing negotiations with the EU that are likely to last weeks, to set quota limits that will lead to sustainable populations of fish in British waters for years to come.

Read the rest here: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/jan/22/only-a-third-of-uks-key-fish-populations-are-not-overfished

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