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[新聞] New Shark-Fin Pictures Reveal Ocean "Strip Mining"


Shark-Fin Haul
Workers at a Taiwanese fishing port clean and process a haul of shark fins in new pictures taken by the U.S.-based Pew Environment Group.

Released  October 19, the images show fins and body parts of vulnerable shark  species—including the scalloped hammerhead and oceanic whitetip—being  prepared for sale.

Up  to 73 million sharks are caught each year for the global fin trade,  which fuels a demand for shark-fin soup, according to Pew. Fishers  usually slice the animals' fins off and throw their still-living bodies  overboard.

"Unfortunately,  since there are no limits on the number of these animals that can be  killed in the open ocean, this activity can continue unabated," Pew's Matt Rand said in a statement. "This strip-mining of the world's sharks is clearly unsustainable."

On  October 21 the Taiwan Fisheries Agency announced a ban starting next  year on shark finning, but the ban only mandates that caught sharks be  taken back to shore with their fins still attached.

"This  announcement is an indication that Taiwan is on the right track when it  comes to protecting sharks. However, it falls short of what is really  needed," Rand said. "A finning ban does not address the larger  overfishing problem that is driving these animals toward extinction."



Daily Catch
A Taiwanese fisher lands a mixed catch, including sharks, in one of the pictures released by Pew.
Shark  fishing in Taiwan involves both large-scale fleets using so-called  long-line fishing in international waters as well as small, local  fishing boats operating closer to shore, experts say.

In Taiwan, 85 percent of sharks caught come from the high seas, Glenn Sant of TRAFFIC—a global wildlife-trade monitoring network—said by email.

The International Union for Conservation of Nature lists more than half of open-ocean shark species as threatened or near-threatened with extinction.



Scalloped Hammerheads
Scalloped hammerhead sharks,  fins removed, are lined up in a Taiwanese processing plant. Each year  an estimated 1.3 to 2.7 million smooth and scalloped hammerheads are  caught for their fins globally, experts say.

Scalloped hammerheads are especially vulnerable to overfishing.  That's because the sharks are slow-growing—they can take up to 17 years  to reach maturity—and females have a long gestation period. A long  pregnancy limits the ability of hammerhead populations to recover once  depleted.

Overall, "sharks play a critical role in the ocean environment," Pew's Jill Hepp said in a statement.
"Where  shark populations are healthy, marine life thrives; but where they have  been overfished, ecosystems fall out of balance," Hepp said.



Factory Fins
A machine shovels piles of frozen shark fins at a Taiwanese factory.
"Taiwan has been one of the five largest catchers of sharks globally for decades," TRAFFIC's Sant said by email.
Sant also co-authored a January report, produced jointly by TRAFFIC and Pew, that ranked the world's shark-catching countries.
The top ten are Indonesia, India, Spain, Taiwan, Argentina, Mexico, Pakistan, the United States, Japan, and Malaysia.



Fins Laid Out to Dry
Shark fins are laid out to dry at a processing plant in Taiwan.
Taiwan's  new plan to ban on shark finning, which will begin in 2012, means that  fishers will need to bring whole sharks, with their fins attached, back  to port.

This  will limit the volume of fish that can be carried on board a vessel,  TRAFFIC's Sant noted. The law is "a welcome move by one of the top five  shark catchers," he said.

However,  a finning ban "does not set limits on how many sharks can be killed,"  Pew's Rand said in a statement. "As such, the hunt will continue."



Shark-Fin Bounty
More than 3,500 shark fins dry in the Taiwanese sun.
These images represent a snapshot of the immense scale of shark-fishing operations," Pew's Rand said in a statement.
Pew  is calling on more governments to follow the lead of some Pacific and  Caribbean countries, which have declared their waters to be shark  sanctuaries.


The  group also wants protection for the most threatened species and to  eliminate shark bycatch, or unwanted species caught while fishing for  another species.



Shark "Logs"
A  pile of dismembered shark carcasses gets offloaded at a warehouse in  Taiwan. In the industry, finless shark bodies are known as "logs."
As  well as international demand for shark-fin soup, there's also a  significant market in Taiwan for shark meat, TRAFFIC's Joyce Wu said via  email.

Some  shark bodies are landed to supply meat demand, but there's concern that  distant water fleets could be finning, due to lack of access to  freezing facilities.

Once the fins have been removed, most shark meat in Taiwan is processed into fish paste and other fish products, she added.



Shark-Fin Assortment
A collection of dismembered shark fins await cleaning and processing.

Thirty  percent of all shark species are now threatened or near threatened with  extinction, due largely to unregulated fishing, according to the  International Union for Conservation of Nature.

"Our  main concern is that it is difficult to demonstrate that the [shark]  catch is from well managed or sustainable sources," TRAFFIC's Sant said.

"It begs the question whether the trade in shark products should be allowed to continue until this problem is resolved."
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When the Buying STOPS,
The Killing STOPS!!
可惜人類會繼續殘殺認為低等過自己嘅動物, 真希望有朝一日外星人會侵略地球...
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