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Curtains of Death: Ban California's Deadly Drift Gillnets!
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Sponsor: The Rainforest Site
It's time California got on board with the rest of the fishing world and abandoned this practice.
Since the 1970s, fishermen off the California coast have been using a fishing technique that indiscriminately kills everything in its path — drift gillnets. These nets, which have only 14-inch openings, are a mile long and are dropped from boats 100 feet into the ocean 1. Whatever swims into the nets are harvested and pulled to the surface. According to NOAA research, California fishermen throw back 60-80 percent 2 of what they catch with gillnets — that’s because a lot of what they are catching is precious, threated, and endangered species.
Used by fisheries to catch swordfish, drift gillnets actually catch whales, sharks, dolphins, sea turtles, and other species of marine life 3. And despite being banned nearly everywhere else, California still uses these huge nets in its fishing industry. It’s something that has to stop now.
In the last 25 years, according to NOAA estimates 4, hundreds of endangered sea turtles, thousands of sea lions and dolphins, and tens of thousands of sharks have been killed by California drift gillnets. Leatherback turtles, one of the victims of drift gillnets, is already on the brink of extinction 5.
Biologist Todd Steiner said of drift gillnets, “everything that swims into it becomes its victim,” calling them “invisible curtains of death 6.” To make matters worse, what fishing boats catch in the nets and don’t keep is just tossed back into the ocean, injured or dead.
California’s fishing industry must stop using drift gillnets in order to protect innocent, intelligent and precious marine mammals and endangered species. Sign the petition asking the Pacific Fishery Management Council and the California Department of Fish and Wildlife to ban the use of these barbaric fishing nets. Our precious marine species must be protected before they are extinct!