Fewer fish and more rules lead to illegal catches, Italian fishers say

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Fewer fish and more rules lead to illegal catches, Italian fishers say
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Robyn Purdon grade 8 excels in level 3 gala in BloemfonteinNew Web Hosting Pioneer Emerges, Offering Affordable Hosting Solutions Coupled with…The line between legal and illegal fishing in the waters off Italy’s Calabria region is often blurred, with fishers blaming stringent top-down regulations for constricting their traditional practices.

“The situations are visible to all, they are experienced every day just by spending a little time on our coasts,” he said, describing illegal activities happening in plain view, such as fishing in the river mouth or near the coast, and the use of prohibited fishing gear and unregistered amateur boats.

At the same time, fishers describe difficulties in simply carrying on with their jobs, which are rooted in local tradition. “The biggest mistake was to issue regulations that apply to the whole Mediterranean Sea … without thinking that other non-EU countries … are not subject to these regulations,” the co-op’s director, Antonio Lombardo, told Mongabay. For example, he said European fishers hunt swordfish in the same waters as Tunisian and Moroccan fishers, but are subject to much stricter regulations: “So they can continue to fish for swordfish with … tools that are now forbidden for us.

The fisher Vincenzo Tripodi inside his fishing boat with a statuette of St. Mary of Porto Salvo, the protectress of seafarers. Image by Monica Pelliccia and Alice Pistolesi for Mongabay.

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