Press Release For Immediate Release – 23 November 2013 Contact: Paul.Dalzell@noaa.gov or (808) 522-8142 or 479-6563 PNA Must Cut Purse-Seine Juvenile Bigeye Catches HONOLULU (23 November 2013) A proposal that would subject the US longline tuna fisheries to a 45 percent reduction in bigeye tuna catch is being proposed by the Parties of Nauru Agreement (PNA), an organization that has supported rampant expansion of tuna purse-seining in the Western and Central Pacific Ocean (WCPO), says Arnold Palacios, chair of the Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council (WPRFMC). This impact of the purse-seine expansion has led to bigeye overfishing and a 75 percent reduction in bigeye yield. Next month, at the 10th regular meeting of the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC10) in Cairns, Australia, 32 countries and territories will try to develop a new conservation and management measure applicable to the world’s largest tuna fisheries. The PNA chief executive officer, Dr. Transform Aqorau, has stated in a Nov. 18, 2013, press release that new rules for tuna fishing in the Western and Central Pacific must cut catches of bigeye tuna by longline fishing vessels, especially in the high seas. Dr. Aqorau specifically singled out the Hawaii longline fleet, which ironically takes only a fraction of the WCPO bigeye catch and is considered the world’s best managed longline fishery. The PNA manages the world’s largest tuna purse-seine fishery. Tuna purse-seiners target skipjack tuna, which is commonly used in canned tuna products. Much of this fishing is conducted around anchored and free floating fish aggregating devices (FADs), which results in the unintended catch of large numbers of juvenile bigeye tuna. This catch of juvenile bigeye, which accounts for about 85 percent of the bigeye tuna landed in the WCPFC Convention Area, has reduced the maximum sustainable yield (MSY) of the stock and has contributed to bigeye overfishing since the late 1980s. Mature bigeye for the sashimi and fresh fish market is the main catch of the Hawaii longline fleet. The Hawaii longline fleet has been fishing at 90 percent of its 2004 bigeye catch as part of the current WCPFC management measures. “We see no reason to make any further cuts to US bigeye longline catch limits because the Hawaii longline fleet operates thousands of miles from the high fishing mortality zone and there is no indication that the bigeye caught by the Hawaii fleet mixes with the fish caught in PNA waters,” Palacios says. “Recent statements by Dr. Aqorau are misleading and avoid addressing the rapid expansion of purseseine fishing that has put the sustainability of bigeye in jeopardy,” Palacios adds. —more— ______________________________________________________________________________ A Council authorized by the Magnuson Fishery Conservation and Management Act of 1976 1164 Bishop Street, Suite 1400, Honolulu, Hawaii • Tel (808) 522-8220 • Fax (808) 522-8226 • www.wpcouncil.org