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Fishing Casualties
Fishing has dwindled the numbers of the
pantropical spotted dolphin, a Pacific Ocean inhabitant, at
a worrying rate. Initially the cause was traced to 'bycatch'
cases in which animals are unintentionally caught in fishing
nets with the targeted species. However, studies done by Katie
Cramer of Scripps Institute of Oceanography and researchers
from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration showed
fishing disrupted the reproductive output of the dolphins.
It separated suckling calves from mothers and interfered with
conception. Fishing activities were launched in the eastern
tropical Pacific in the 1950s for the yellowfin tuna fish
that swim with dolphin schools. This led to massive mortalities
of the pantropical spotted dolphin. With new fishing techniques
put in place, bycatch deaths declined by the 1990s but dolphin
numbers did not increase. The study proved this to be due
to effects of fishing that went beyond direct bycatch kill.
Source: Down To Earth,
Date: January 2009

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