How We Fish Matters: Addressing the Ecological Impacts of Canadian

of the authors. Please acknowledge source on all reproduced materials. The research, data synthesis and writing of this report were sponsored by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. COVER PHOTOS Front cover: LEFT–Cold water corals are found on Canada's west and east coast, and are vulnerable...

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Main Authors: Susanna D. Fuller, Ace Picco, Jennifer Ford, Chih-fan Tsao, Lance E. Morgan, Dorthea Hangaard, Ratana Chuenpagdee, Ecology Action Centre, Living Oceans Society, Susanna D
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.524.9193
http://www.howwefish.ca/images/downloads/how_we_fish_report.pdf
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Summary:of the authors. Please acknowledge source on all reproduced materials. The research, data synthesis and writing of this report were sponsored by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation. COVER PHOTOS Front cover: LEFT–Cold water corals are found on Canada's west and east coast, and are vulnerable to the impacts of bottom tending fishing gear. PHOTO: Dale Sanders. TOP RIGHT–Endangered porbeagle sharks are occasionally caught in bottom trawl fisheries for groundfish on Canada's east coast. PHOTO: H.R. Yao. BOTTOM RIGHT–Fishing vessels equipped with bottom longline gear on Canada's east coast. H: IStock. Back cover: TOP–Large catches of sponges occur in Canada's arctic and deep water fisheries. PHOTO: Fisheries and Oceans Canada. MIDDLE–LOBSTER traps piled high on wharves in Prince Edward Island. PHOTO: Shane McClure. BOTTOM–Herring fishery opening on the British Columbia coast. PHOTO: