Cartagena, Spain —
It's a bluefin tuna graveyard, white crosses float next to tuna ranch cages. We end our three month Mediterranean tour back where we started, in Spain, highlighting the desperate state of bluefin tuna stocks.
During the tour that started with the launch of the Greenpeace tuna
report onboard the Esperanza in Barcelona, we've confirmed our worst
fears about the threats facing the Mediterranean Sea.
Bluefin tuna are being plundered, illegal driftnets known as "walls
of death" continue to be used despite their prohibition and the rampant
overdevelopment of the Mediterranean coastline is destroying coastal
ecosytems.
However, as we showed with the proposal for a network of marine reserves for the Mediterranean, there is still hope.
As the
Rainbow Warrior concludes the 2006 tour of the Mediterranean, we look
back on some of the highlights and many suprises from the past three
months. From diving and documenting the beauty below the surface,
confiscating illegal driftnets and rescuing sailors from sinking boats
to being blockaded by the fishermen in Marseille, it's certainly been a
memorable tour.
"The Mediterranean is in desperate need of a sea change -
literally. The large industrial fishing fleets are out of control, the
tuna ranches are out of control, the illegal driftnetters are out of
control, even the jellyfish are out of control, partly due to its main
predators like tuna and sea turtles being wiped out," said Karli
Thomas, of Greenpeace International. "A network of marine reserves
would guarantee the protection of the Mediterranean species and their
habitat and definitely help to reverse the fishery's decline."