2. Bluefin Tuna
S Scientific name: Thunnus Thynnus
S They are warm blooded.
S Size: Maximum length is 180 inches total length. Adult
Bluefin tuna weight from 300 pounds to 1500 pounds.
S Habitat: they come near shore seasonally. It can endure
range of temperatures both above and below, down to
depth of greater than 3000 feet. Located in the
Mediterranean sea; Iceland to the Canary Islands and
Newfoundland, Canada to the Gulf of Mexico.
S Predators: killer whales and sharks
S Feeding habits: they feed on squid, eels, crustaceans,
mackerel, flying fish, herring, whiting and mullet.
3. Bluefin Tuna (Thunnus
S thynnus)
Distributed throughout Atlantic and Pacific Oceans in
subtropical and temperate waters. In the western Atlantic
Ocean, it is found from Labrador, Canada, to northern
Brazil, including the Gulf of Mexico. In the eastern Atlantic
Ocean, it is found from Norway to the Canary Islands. In
the western Pacific Ocean, it is distributed from Japan to
the Philippines. In the eastern Pacific Ocean, it is
distributed from the southern coast of Alaska, USA to
Baja California, Mexico.
4. Abundance
S Between 1970 and 1998, there was 70% drop of bluefin tuna.
This shows the rapid decline.
S In 2009, there was 72% decline in the Eastern Atlantic and 82%
decline in Western Atlantic.
S Atlantic bluefin tuna
numbers have dropped
96.4%, due to
overfishing.
5. Species life history
S Spawning in the Gulf of Mexico occurs between mid-April and mid-
June when females, which mature around age 8, release
approximately 30 million eggs each. The highest density of bluefin
larvae, the primary indicator of spawning, occurs in the northern
Gulf of Mexico with lesser larval concentrations appearing off the
Texas coast and in the Straits of Florida.
S In the eastern Atlantic, spawning occurs exclusively in the
Mediterranean and Adriatic Seas from June through August, with
the highest larvae concentrations appearing around southern Italy.
Although some fishery biologists believe that eastern Atlantic
bluefin reach sexual maturity several years earlier than western
Atlantic bluefin (possibly as young as ages 4-5), this
understanding has been criticized.
6. Continued…
S In the upper layer of water where wind and wave action keeps temperatures
uniform. Once they are hatched, the young tuna are around 2.5 mm and
barely distinguishable from other types of tuna.
S As they grow to 12 mm they develop small and often faint pigment patterns
on their fins and tail, which help tell the species apart. Beyond 12 mm,
secondary pigment patterns develop which again confuse the identity of the
species until much later.
S As they grow, the young fish move southwards towards major feeding
grounds in the colder Southern Ocean. It begins near the spawning ground
and is largest in April, right after the spawning period, helps sweep the tuna
down from the West Australian coast to the Great Australian Bight and
beyond.
S Young tuna likes shallow water closer to the shore and also tend to surface
more, perhaps to gather certain types of food, to help with body temperature
regulation or in response to light and wind conditions. The Great Australian
Bight is the main Australian region where young tuna surface, mostly in the
period from November to April.
7. Reason why it is endangered
S Bluefin tuna is highly valued as a food fish around the
world. It is sold fresh or frozen. They are especially
favored in Japan, where they can pay in a high price in
the raw seafood market. A single fish can sell for $45,000
USD.
S Lack of management
S Illegal fishing
8. Continued…
S Used for sushi, sashimi and steaks.
S Big business in Japan. Japan has bought and frozen over 47 tons
of tuna. This is a strategy which anticipates the rise in prices once
the species becomes commercially extinct. Each fish is so
valuable in the Japanese market that many fishermen are
dependent on these catches.
S Fish farming, where wild tuna are caught (often as juveniles who
will never be able to reproduce) and are fattened up to sell in the
market at a high price. Between 4 and 11 kilos of smaller species
are required to producer 1 kg of tuna, which has to be fed 3 times
a day. Many of the fish farms in Italy are controlled by the mafia.
S Companies such as Corporation Mitsubishi and Taiyo are buying
and freezing as much bluefin tuna as they can.
9. Solution of preventing endangered
tuna
S Impose strict limits on the Bluefin tuna catch
S Ban illegal fishing
S Prohibit fish farming
10. Money toward PGO
S If the bluefin becomes extinct, then it could have major
impact on ecosystems of our ocean. Bluefin tuna is part of
a large ecosystem. Some other types of fish that depend
on Bluefin tuna for a food source will be disappear. Also,
animals above the food chain will have to eat other things,
which will disrupt the ecosystem and will die out.
Moreover, whatever the tuna eats, such as smaller fish or
plants will overpopulate the ecosystem.
11.
12. Work cite
S http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/Gallery/Descript/BluefinTuna
/BluefinTuna.html
S http://isc.ac.affrc.go.jp/
S http://www.oceansentry.org/lang-en/bluefin-tuna.html
S http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2013/jan/09/overfi
shing-pacific-bluefin-tuna
S http://www.justsportfishing.com/bluefin_tuna.html