But it won't help idiotfisher.
High price of fuel may help save the idiotfish
Large trawlers stay closer to shore, giving the deep-sea 'species of special concern' a reprieve
Suzanne Ahearne
Vancouver Sun
Friday, August 01, 2008
The poor idiotfish -- nicknamed by fishermen for its gawky, bulbous eyes -- might get the last laugh yet.
The high cost of fuel is keeping large numbers of British Columbia's deep-sea trawlers closer to shore, giving the idiotfish, one of the newest darlings of the fishing industry, a bit of a reprieve.
However, the David Suzuki Foundation is calling on the federal government to impose a full closure on the fishery to ensure the idiotfish population and sensitive habitat are protected.
The longspine thornyhead, as it's formally known, thrives in low-oxygen, high-pressure waters more than 800 metres deep.
The fish was listed last year as a species of special concern by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada and is being considered for legal listing under the federal Species at Risk Act.
Long a bycatch of deep-sea trawlers fishing for more lucrative mackerel, the idiotfish became a targeted species just eight years ago.
Since then, the population off the Pacific coast has been in decline, dropping by approximately 50 per cent, said Bill Wareham, the Suzuki Foundation's senior marine conservation specialist.
Scott Moorehead of Longliner Seafoods said the industry has been trying to create a domestic market for the thornyhead, but that his Granville Island fish stand doesn't sell much of it.
The little orange rockfish is mostly head and bones.
Its spines can cause irritation, the bright colour fades quickly to off-white after it is caught, and its big eyes become concave.
As well, Moorehead said, many of his customers are environmentally aware and try to stay away from groundfish, much of which is caught in an unsustainable fishery.
Most of the year-round catch goes for export to Japan and Korea and small quantities are sold locally in Chinatown.
The quota for thornyhead, set by the federal fisheries department, is 425 tonnes but over the last year, the catch has been only about half of that.
The trawlers have not gone out for their full quotas because the economics currently don't make sense.
The bottom-draggers are required to pull a net for 30 km, making for huge fuel costs.
sahearne@png.canwest.com© The Vancouver Sun 2008