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An estimated 950,000 tons of fish were caught in Russian, Canadian and U.S. Arctic waters between 1950 and
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Ineffective reporting "has given us a false sense of comfort that the Arctic is still a pristine frontier when it comes to fisheries," lead researcher Dirk Zeller of the University of British Columbia said in a written statement.The results of the study were published this week in the journal Polar Biology.
The researchers said they collected data on fish catches from a variety
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The researchers estimate that, between 1950 and 2006, 89,000 tons of fish were caught in Alaskan coastal waters in the Arctic and 94,000 tons in Canadian waters, but neither Canada nor the United States supplied that data to the U.N.
An estimated 770,000 tons of fish were caught in Russian waters off
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The researchers said that most Arctic conservation efforts concentrate on protecting animal such as seals and polar bears, and they warned that the marine mammals will not survive if the rest of the region's ecosystem is neglected.
The researchers said the problems could become worse if climate
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Researchers at the university issued a study in December warning that global fleets were running out of fishing grounds, and the waters of the Arctic and Antarctic were among the few areas remaining for exploitation.
Source:
Reuters, "Researchers warn Arctic fishing under-reported", accessed February 5, 2011
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