Seafood New Zealand self-suspends MSC certification of orange roughy fishery

Published 2023년 12월 4일

Tridge summary

The east and south Chatham Rise stocks of orange roughy in New Zealand have lost their Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) certification, which is problematic for the fishery as it sends more than half its catch to the U.S. The loss of certification is due to new scientific evidence that shows orange roughy reach maturity at 80 years, contradicting previous assumptions that they reach maturity at 30 years. Environmentalists are calling for a ban on bottom-trawling for orange roughy and are urging the government to close biodiversity hotspots to this type of fishing.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The east and south Chatham Rise stocks, which account for approximately 80 percent of New Zealand’s orange roughy catch, have lost their Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) certification. Losing the certification and its accompanying label is problematic for the fishery, which sends more than half its catch to the U.S. Last year, the MSC recertified the fishery, despite concern around the stock assessment the certification was based on, which used assumptions in its development that orange roughy reach full maturity at 30 years. In May 2022, new scientific evidence put the age of maturity and spawning at around 80 years, with only skipped spawning from 35 to 80 years of age, according to Fisheries New Zealand.“Without an assessment, caution is always best,” Seafood New Zealand said. “We are committed to ensuring healthy, abundant fisheries are here to stay, and we need the best available science to inform fisheries management decisions. This week, we have gone a step further and ...

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