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Ecuador navy surveils huge Chinese fishing fleet near Galapagos

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  • Ecuador navy surveils huge Chinese fishing fleet near Galapagos

    Source: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-e...-idUSKCN2550M6

    August 9, 2020 / 11:05 AM / Updated 6 hours ago
    Ecuador navy surveils huge Chinese fishing fleet near Galapagos
    Santiago Arcos

    The navy conducted a patrol mission on Friday that included a flyover of the region where the hulking vessels are fishing, as well as reconnaissance by military patrol ships. A total of 340 vessels are currently in the area, the navy said, compared with some 260 reported last month.

    Images taken as part of the flyover, which included journalists, showed that at least one of the vessels appeared to be ageing and in need of maintenance.

    Ecuador’s Navy Commander, Rear Admiral Darwin Jarrin, said the navy has approached Colombia and Peru to share information and seek a regional response to the vessels, most of which can hold up to 1,000 tonnes of catch.

    The fleet generally spends several weeks fishing off the coast of Peru before approaching the Galapagos.

    The fishing fleet has since 2017 been arriving in the summer months and fishing just outside the Galapagos territorial waters, drawn by marine species such as the endangered hammerhead shark...

  • #2
    Source: https://www.npr.org/2020/08/09/90060...om-overfishing

    Galapagos Island Shark Population In Danger From Overfishing
    August 9, 20207:55 AM ET
    Heard on Weekend Edition Sunday

    NPR's Lulu Garcia-Navarro speaks with Alex Hearn. He's advocating for an expansion of protected waters in the Galapagos region to protect endangered sharks from international fishermen.

    LULU GARCIA-NAVARRO, HOST:

    Sharks in the Galapagos Islands are being decimated by fleets of fishing vessels, many of them Chinese. And that's bringing these vital creatures to the brink of extinction. Alex Hearn is a professor of biology at the Universidad San Francisco de Quito in Ecuador, and he's advocating for an expansion of protected waters in the area to save the sharks. And he joins us now.

    Professor Hearn, welcome to the program.

    ALEX HEARN: Thank you. It's great to be here...

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