EJToday is SEJ's selection of new and outstanding stories on environmental topics in print and on the air, updated every weekday. SEJ also offers a free e-mailed digest of the day's EJToday postings, called SEJ-beat. SEJ members are subscribed automatically, but may opt out here. Non-members may subscribe here. EJToday is also available via RSS feed. Please see Editorial Guidelines for EJToday content.
"Drought-Stricken Streams Threaten Calif. Salmon"
AP, 09/07/2009"California's third year of drought has worsened the already dire outlook for endangered coho salmon, as coastal creeks used for spawning dwindle into disconnected pools where fish get trapped and die."
"Agency’s Non-Decision Opens Gulf To Fish Farming"
Houston Chronicle, 09/04/2009"The Gulf of Mexico opened to industrial-size fish farms Thursday after federal regulators declined to oppose the plan."
"First Global Illegal Fishing Treaty Agreed: UN"
AFP, 09/02/2009"A group of 91 countries have agreed on a treaty that will block ships involved in illegal fishing from entering signatory ports and thus help prevent the fish going to market, the UN said on Tuesday."
"Illegal Fishing Evades U.N. Crackdown: Study"
Reuters, 08/26/2009"Illegal fishing is depleting the seas and robbing poor nations in Africa and Asia of resources, but a lack of global cooperation is undermining efforts to track rogue vessels, an environmental group said on Tuesday."
"U.S. Commerce Secretary Freezes Arctic Fishing Expansion"
ENS, 08/21/2009"To prevent ecosystem damage due to commercial harvesting activity, U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke today decided to prohibit the expansion of commercial fishing in federal Arctic waters until researchers gather enough information on fish and the Arctic marine environment to put safeguards in place."
"New Gov't Study Shows Mercury in Fish Widespread"
AP, 08/20/2009"No fish can escape mercury pollution. That's the take-home message from a federal study of mercury contamination released Wednesday that tested fish from nearly 300 streams across the country."
"Regulators Curb Longline Fishing in Gulf of Mexico to Protect Sea Turtles"
Greenwire, 08/18/2009"Federal regulators voted [Aug. 13] to impose tough new restrictions on the commercial longline fishing fleet in the Gulf of Mexico in an attempt to protect marine turtles."
"Millions of Salmon Disappear From Canadian River"
Reuters, 08/14/2009"Millions of sockeye salmon have disappeared mysteriously from a river on Canada's Pacific Coast that was once known as the world's most fertile spawning ground for sockeye."
Lawmakers, Enviros Maneuver to Block Deepwater Aquaculture
NYTimes, 08/04/2009"With a deadline looming for approval of a federal plan that would open the Gulf of Mexico to deepwater fish farming, House lawmakers and conservationists are plotting strategies to block such offshore ventures until Congress creates a system to regulate them."
"Imperiled Fisheries Make A Comeback, Study Shows"
NPR, 07/31/2009"There's no question that the world's fish are in trouble. Fishermen are pulling fish out of the seas far faster than these populations can grow back. Some fisheries are heading toward collapse or even extinction. But a major new analysis of this grim picture shows that fisheries aren't doomed. In fact, some are on the mend."
"River Project Offers New Hope For Oysters, Researchers Say"
Wash Post, 07/31/2009"Scientists say they've created something in a Virginia river that hasn't been seen since the late 1800s: a vast, thriving reef of American oysters, the shellfish that helped create the Chesapeake Bay's ecosystem and then nearly vanished from it."
"The Most Cooked-Up Catch"
High Country News, 07/29/2009Despite what you see on TV's "The Deadliest Catch," the Rambo-style competition for crab in the Bering Sea has been ended under a new system that permanently divides up the catch among all the boats in the fishery.
---"Rainbow Trout Rebound in Renowned River"
AP, 07/21/2009"Rainbow trout are rebounding in the Madison River, the world-class fishing stream where Montana's first known outbreak of whirling disease occurred about 15 years ago, devastating the rainbow fishery."
"Council Continues Gulf Longline Fishing Ban"
Greenwire, 06/23/2009"The Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council ... left in place a moratorium on longline fishing to aid a federally protected sea turtle species."
Toxaphene in Lake Superior Fish Poses Risk
South Bend Tribune, 06/15/2009"The largest, deepest and coldest Great Lake holds another distinction -- the highest levels of the contaminant toxaphene in the region and possibly anywhere in the world."

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