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How did these fish end up on the Red List?

Página - diciembre 15, 2009
These fish are on the Greenpeace International Seafood Red List because they have a very high risk of being sourced from unsustainable fisheries or unsustainable aquaculture operations. The table below provides a simple overview of the key problems with the fisheries that catch these species.
  CATCHES VULNERABLE SPECIES USES DESTRUCTIVE FISHING METHODS OVERFISHING USES UNSELECTIVE FISHING METHODS PIRATE FISHING

CATCHES VULNERABLE SPECIES
Fisheries exploit species that are highly vulnerable to fishing pressure with no evidence that stocks can be maintained at a health level and/or unintentionally catches and kills other endangered species like turtles, sharks or dolphins.

DESTRUCTIVE FISHING METHODS
Fisheries use methods that damage the seabed or impact on sensitive habitats.

OVERFISHING
Many stocks are overfished and/or management of the stocks is leading to their decline

UNSELECTIVE FISHING METHODS
Fisheries use methods that capture high amounts of fish that are thrown back into the sea dead or dying or it catches high amounts of immature fish.

PIRATE FISHING
In fisheries for this species pirate fishing (illegal, unregulated and unreported fishing) is a major problem. 2

Anglerfish or monkfish or goosefish          
Atlantic cod

         
Atlantic halibut

         
Atlantic salmon

         
Common sole

         
Eel

         
European plaice

         
Greenland halibut

         
Haddock

         
Hake

         
Hoki or blue hake or blue grenadier
         
Marlin

         
Orange roughy or deep sea perch
         
Patagonian toothfish or Chilean seabass          
Red fish or rockfish

         
Sharks

         
Skates and rays

         
Swordfish

         
Tropical shrimp/prawn

         
Tuna - main market species
         

Notes:

(1) Please check the species page in the Red List for more information about aquaculture issues.

(2) Any fishery that operates in areas, or target species, for which no conservation and management measures exist are graded red. In regions where management exists, but IUU fishing is known to be a major problem, Greenpeace does not red-grade all fisheries in the area, but highlights the issue so that more care is taken when sourcing fish to prevent the trade of fish caught by owners and/or operators of vessels engaging in IUU. Please visit the pirate fishing pages and the Greenpeace 'red-grade' criteria for unsustainable fisheries for more details.

View the Red List

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