Industrial Fisheries Crowd out Artisanal Fisherpersons in South America
Industrial Fisheries Crowd out Artisanal Fisherpersons in South America
By Marianela Jarroud
SANTIAGO, Jun 17 2015 (IPS) - Millions of families on South Americas Pacific coast have long depended on artisanal fishing for a living. But they have been increasingly being pushed aside by the industrial fisheries that have made this region a major player in the global seafood industry.
Fishing is part of the most ancient history of the Americas, social anthropologist Juan Carlos Skewes told IPS. Both on land and along the coasts and rivers it provided sustenance for many (indigenous) peoples, including those whose nomadic lives revolved around the sea.
In Latin America and the Caribbean there are over two million small-scale fisherpersons who generate some three billion dollars a year in revenues, according to the Latin American Organisation for Fisheries Development (OLDEPESCA).
Three of the worlds large marine ecosystems are found along South Americas coasts.
The main one is the Humboldt Current. It flows north along the west coast of South America, from the southern tip of Chile, past Ecuador, to northern Peru, creating one of the worlds most productive marine ecosystems with approximately 20 percent of the worlds fish catch, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).
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http://www.ipsnews.net/2015/06/industrial-fisheries-crowd-out-artisanal-fisherpersons-in-south-america/