Joke Collection Website - Bulletin headlines - What do you mean, ghost fishing?

What do you mean, ghost fishing?

Ghost fishing refers to abandoned, lost or abandoned fishing gear.

Ghost fishing gear refers to fishing nets, fishing lines and other fishing devices that sink to the bottom of the sea due to various factors in the process of fishing seafood. Fishing gear lost or abandoned in the ocean weighs 640,000 tons every year. The United Nations Environment Programme estimates that this ghost network accounts for one tenth of the total marine debris. Ghost fishing gear will change the living environment of benthic microorganisms and have a negative impact on benthic organisms. The tiny sediments they carry will block the cracks in coral reefs and lead to local hypoxia.

Abandoning fishing gear will also change the seabed and marine environment, and the propeller of the ship may also trip, making navigation difficult. All countries in the world are trying to improve the management of fish resources. If the influence of ghost fishing continues to expand, these efforts will be greatly reduced. Fishing gear stays in the ocean for many reasons. Storms and bad weather may drag it from the boat into the water. The marine environment itself may also cause the fishing gear to break, or the fishing gear may be entangled with other objects in the ocean and it is difficult to recover.

The solution to the ghost fishing is as follows:

1, fishing gear identification

Fishing gear identification can identify its owner and encourage responsible management of fishing gear. This is an ideal way to determine and understand where the recovered fishing gear comes from, so as to return it to the owner, not just to find out the offender. Investing in preventive good practices is usually more cost-effective than cleaning up lost fishing gear, as is promoting fishing gear identification.

2. Improve the reporting and recycling mechanism.

Lost fishing gear should be reported for recycling. Many ships may not be able to recover fishing gear by themselves because they lack suitable equipment or the recovery operation is too dangerous for the crew. There are also some ships that choose not to report the lost fishing gear for fear of taking responsibility. The method of "no responsibility" can be adopted to exempt the ship from the responsibility of losing fishing gear. The reward mechanism for recovery can also be adopted, so that ships with corresponding facilities can not only recover their own fishing gear, but also recover other lost fishing gear when they find it at sea.