For millennia, the
Overfishing is taking a heavy toll on fish stocks, with the numbers of tuna plummeting and anchovy becoming scarce in the western
â€Many species are becoming increasingly rare,†says Alain Bonzon, secretary-general of a commission monitoring fishing in the
The problem is visible not only in the Mediterranean, but also in
â€We are catching less and less fish," observes fisherman Emilio Louro from the northwestern
"Our income is shrinking, young people are leaving, the village is becoming a place of old people,†he told newspaper El Pais. Louro realizes that overfishing puts the livelihood of thousands of fishermen in danger, but not everyone is that smart.
Many small fishing companies are waging a desperate battle against large, sometimes multinational ones, which see the sea only as a source of money. The number of fishermen has halved to about 50 000 since 1990 in
At the same time, improved technology has increased the size of catches, leading to an unscrupulous pillage of the sea’s resources.
Many Spanish and French fishing companies have used EU subsidies to overhaul their fleets, installing sonar systems and new engines.
Fishing boats may have engines four times as powerful as the law allows them to have in the
Tuna are fattened in special ranches around the
â€If this goes on, new generations will see bluefin tuna only in photographs,†says Jose Luis Cort of the Oceanographic Institute in the northern city of
The consequences of overfishing could be tragic for other species as well. Last spring’s catch of anchovy from the
The results of overfishing are becoming visible in the rapid increase of jellyfish off touristic beaches in the
Environmentalists blame lax European government enforcement, while European officials say regulations are insufficient and fishing a difficult activity to monitor.
The environmental group Greenpeace believes the