Just off this picturesque Italian island, a fortune is fattening in two giant, underwater cages.
Almost every day, workers dump five tons of thawed herring or mackerel into the water to feed more than 250 tons of giant bluefin tuna, which were caught hundreds of miles away and will eventually be sold to
This tuna farm is part of a vast industry that environmentalists say is rapidly driving the bluefin tuna, one of the largest and most prized fish species in the
Fisheries in
Mediterranean-wide quotas exist for bluefin, which is the only fish in the region for which such regulations have been implemented. But these quotas are twice what scientists recommend and, environmental groups say, they are poorly enforced.
An independent report commissioned by the World Wildlife Fund found that while
The fundamental problem, say environmental groups, is there are too many boats, most using new fishing methods that are devastatingly efficient.
Airplanes are used illegally to spot schools of fish. Purse seiners, a type of fishing vessel, encircle entire schools with their nets. Then the fish are taken to tuna farms where they are fattened. Environmentalists say that the opportunity for profit through farming encourages fishermen to catch immature fish – often before they have spawned.
But Burkay Gokgoz, manager of the Akua Italia farm, deflects criticism of the industry, saying companies such as his operate within the law, buying only mature fish that are within a country's quota. He says the burden should be on the International Convention for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas to enforce quotas.