Salmon: Thriving or Threatened?
Add to Lightbox DownloadSeasonal fish workers take a break after processing a small amount of salmon brought in late in the evening at the factory Okean -Zapad in Ust Bosheresk, Kamchatka. The dwindling salmon population illustrates that wildlife and humans alike are at risk on both sides of the international boundary line. The western Bering Sea suffers from high levels of illegal fishing and many areas are overfished. The increasing demand for salmon and salmon caviar, a delicacy in Russia and Japan, is reducing salmon populations beyond the point which they can naturally recover. Over the last two decades, the relatively well-protected Kamchatka fisheries have deteriorated along with the capacity of management agencies to enforce laws regulating harvest. Salmon habitat is also under increasing development pressure. The pristine rivers of the Kamchatka Peninsula - spawning grounds for salmon - and surrounding landscape are being cut by roads and infrastructure for mining and oil and gas expansion.
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- Ami Vitale
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