In the Daily Mail today
Just goes to show -- the sky really is falling.
"Our taste for seabass put stocks in decline
British stocks of wild sea bass are running dangerously low because of soaring demand experts warned yesterday.
The has become fashionable thanks to the backing of celebrity chefs and its popularity with gastropub customers.
Sales have trebled in the last two years and the amoint landed on our shores has risen by 75%.
But the Bass Anglers' Sporing-fishing Society has called a halt to catching the species for three months during its spawning season.
John Leballieur, of the Society, said: 'I have never seen a period when the numbers of young bass have been so low for so long.
'Across the southern UK there has been a decline.'
Part of the problem is that seabass take seven years to reach breeding age.
Recent figures from Seafish, the marine fishing authority showed that sales of bass have more thn trebled since 2005 jumping from £7million to £22 million today.
The majority - 80,000 tons - is the farmed variety usually sold in supermarkets.
But the amount of wild sea bass landed of (sic) Britain's coast-line has also soared - from 407 tons in 2000 to 714 tons last year."
British stocks of wild sea bass are running dangerously low because of soaring demand experts warned yesterday.
The has become fashionable thanks to the backing of celebrity chefs and its popularity with gastropub customers.
Sales have trebled in the last two years and the amoint landed on our shores has risen by 75%.
But the Bass Anglers' Sporing-fishing Society has called a halt to catching the species for three months during its spawning season.
John Leballieur, of the Society, said: 'I have never seen a period when the numbers of young bass have been so low for so long.
'Across the southern UK there has been a decline.'
Part of the problem is that seabass take seven years to reach breeding age.
Recent figures from Seafish, the marine fishing authority showed that sales of bass have more thn trebled since 2005 jumping from £7million to £22 million today.
The majority - 80,000 tons - is the farmed variety usually sold in supermarkets.
But the amount of wild sea bass landed of (sic) Britain's coast-line has also soared - from 407 tons in 2000 to 714 tons last year."
Just goes to show -- the sky really is falling.