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FishNet USA
National Fisheries Institute
 
If you've gotten to this page, it's safe to assume that you are interested in fish, in fishing and in seafood. That being the case, we can further assume that, like the rest of us, you've been assaulted over the last several years with a barrage of media pronouncements that the Armeggdon of the oceans is at hand.
It's likely that you take these pronouncements with a grain of salt. If you don't, you should.
 
While our oceans are certainly  facing problems, it's hard to believe - as pronouncements from the ocean crisis industry would have us - that they are primarily caused by fishing. And in fact, this industry's slavish devotion to demonizing fishing is responsible for the public's turning a blind eye to the real threats: the mass movement of the people to the coasts, the loss of critical coastal habitat to the attendant  development, and the continuing and increasing release into our estuaries of an ever-growing spectrum of household pollutants. But who's looking? A well-coordinated, multi-million dollar "research" and public relations campaign blaming it all on fishing has effectively diverted the public's attention since the Exxon Valdez disaster over a decade ago.
 
Does overfishing happen? Of course, but less each year as we learn to more effectively manage our fisheries. Can the uncontrolled use of fishing gear negatively impact vulnerable areas of ocean bottom? Sometimes, but mechanisms are now in place to identify and protect critical areas (note here that fishing impacts can be readily controlled but most "upstream effects" from rampant coastal development continue virtually unabated).
 
Below are links to various websites where ocean issues are put into a more realistic perspective. Please invest a bit of time in visiting them and in considering the information they present. The health of the oceans depends on well-informed political decisions supported by a well-informed electorate. You're not going to be well-informed without knowing what's going on behind and beyond the headlines.
 
Thank you,
Nils E. Stolpe
p.s. Please visit the websites of our sponsors, which are listed to the left. Their generous support allows us to continue to present "the rest of the story" about fish and fishing, and no matter what part of the commercial fishing industry they are in, they are and will continue to be among the leaders.
 

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A directory to Nils Stolpe's columns from National Fisherman magazine
When it comes to anti-fishing NGOs, they aren't all what they claim to be.
In the fishing industry, short-tern cutbacks can result in permanent business losses
Research that  wouldn't make the grade in any other discipline is sold as  acceptable in fisheries science.
Exploring various aspects of fisheries management and ocean governance
Fishing communities need protection far more than the fish stocks they rely on.
The difficulties of running a profitable fishing business under  today's management regime.
Putting the so-called "fishery crisis in its proper historical context.
All you ever wanted to know about the health effects of consuming fish and shellfish