As the annual meeting of the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) ended on Nov. 26 in Mallorca, Spain, the commission has been praised for taking steps to modernize Atlantic fishery management, although failures to sufficiently cut catch quotas for bigeye tuna and shortfin mako sharks have drawn heavy criticism. [...]
Want to keep reading?
Sign up for a trial to have full access to our articles for 7 days!
Have an account? Log in here:
Enter the email address associated with your account. We'll send you instructions to reset your password.
We’ve sent a link to to change your password.
Please check your inbox to reset your password securely and easily.