Labrador Indigenous group calls for halt to commercial capelin fishery
NunatuKavut Community Council calls latest stock assessment 'alarming'
A group representing Inuit in southern Labrador is asking Fisheries and Oceans Canada to halt the commercial capelin fishery on the east coast.
"There is no more important species in the food chain. Itmust be protected," said the president ofNunatuKavut, Todd Russell, on Tuesday.
Russell said the most recent stock assessment, which shows a 70 per cent decline from 2015, is"alarming" and"a call for action."
Scientists have said the stock has declined because of environmental factors and late spawning, not because of the commercial fishery, which had a 20,000-tonnequota last year.
What humans fishis small compared to the amount eaten by other fish, birds and whales, according to the experts at DFO.
"You can't take that amount out of the water and say it has no impact. Our people are seeing it," Russell toldLabrador Morning.
He said people in southern Labrador have noted that capelinare also smaller than usual and appear unhealthy.
A suspension of the fishery is what theNunatuKavutCommunity Council is calling for in a letter to Dominic LeBlanc, the federal fisheries minister.
In the meantime, Russell said the department needs to do more scientific study and pay attention to the observations of people who live near the ocean.
With files from Labrador Morning