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Keywords
Back lit
Bycatch
Day
Driftnet fishing
Fish
Fishers
Fishing (Industry)
Gloves
Hands
KWCI (GPI)
Low angle view
Men
Oceans (campaign title)
One person
Outdoors
Drift-net Fisherman Displays Lupon
A Mexican drift-net fisherman displays a poisonous lupon, or scorpion fish, caught as by-catch in the 1km long drift net used on the panga fishing boat he works on. Though pangas themselves are small fishing boats, their sheer numbers pose a great threat to the marine environment at the northern end of the Gulf of California, including the critically endangered vaquita dolphin. There are 220 bottom-trawling panga's using drift-nets operating from the small town of San Felipe alone.
The Greenpeace vessel 'MY Esperanza' is currently in Mexico to highlight the threats from overfishing, destructive tourism development, pollution and marine habitat loss.
Unique identifier:
GP01898
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
27/11/2006
Locations:
Gulf of California
,
Mexico
,
North America
Credit line:
© Greenpeace / Alex Hofford
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)
Containers
Shoot:
Defending Our Oceans Tour in Mexico
The Greenpeace vessel 'MY Esperanza' is currently in the 'World's Aquarium' on the Gulf of California, Mexico as part of the Defending Our Oceans Tour. This area is renowned for its rich marine life and has huge economic benefit for the whole of Mexico, bringing nearly five million tourists and providing half the countries fish supply. Pressure from destructive fishing, pollution and uncontrolled tourism development are threatening life in the Aquarium. One of the focuses for this part of the tour is the plight of the world's most endangered porpoise - the vaquita. Greenpeace are calling for a network of marine reserves to be introduced globally in order to control fishing and protect endangered species.
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