Grand Banks cod stocks grow 69% since 2007 - Action News
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Science

Grand Banks cod stocks grow 69% since 2007

New fisheries figures show Atlantic cod stocks are recovering in the Grand Banks although they're still only one-tenth of what they were in the 1960s, according to the World Wildlife Fund Canada.

Atlantic cod population recovering, though still far short of 1960s levels

Atlantic cod stocks are recovering in the Grand Banks, new fisheriesfigures show.

The codpopulation at the underwater plateau southeast of Newfoundland has grown 69 per cent since 2007. However, thatstill only brings it to 10 per cent of what the stocks were in the 1960s, the World Wildlife Fund Canada said Thursday.

"While this cod stock is still near historic lows, a significant increase in the number of spawning fish is good news for the future of this once major fishery," theconservationgroup said in a statement accompanying its preview of the Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization's Scientific Council Report.

However, WWF-Canada warned that for the recovery to continue, the fisheries organization, also known as NAFO,needs to make a commitment at its annual meeting this month to a strategy for rebuilding cod stocks. The intergovernmental organization meets in Halifax from Sept. 20 to 24.

"What they need to have is a plan for cod recovery," said Robert Rangeley, WWF-Canada's vice-president for theAtlantic Region "That's the bottom line."

A moratorium oncod fishing in the Grand Bankswas imposed in1994, two years after the moratorium on northern cod, a population of the species a little further north.

The World Wildlife Fund noted that Canada has done a good job of not exceeding voluntary limits for the number of cod caught accidentally as "by-catch" while fishing for other species.

It said European Union fleets continue to exceed the limits, however, and this "accidentally-on-purpose" approach continues to threaten the cod recovery.

The conservation group wants by-catch limits decreased and enforced. Rangelyadvocates setting rules that would require fishing fleets to take specific actions when they approach the limits, such as avoiding a certain area forthe rest of theseason.