Beluga sturgeon may join threatened-species list
But
U.S. officials have held off banning beluga caviar imports
for six months.
By
Ludmilla Lelis | Sentinel
Staff Writer
Posted April 21, 2004 Federal
wildlife officials announced Tuesday that the beluga sturgeon
-- an ancient fish that produces the world's most expensive
caviar -- should be protected as a threatened species under
the U.S. Endangered Species Act.
However, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service postponed for
six months the potential ban on caviar imports that would
normally come with such protective status.
That six-month window buys the federal government time to
decide whether to ban or reduce imports of beluga caviar.
It also gives a Pierson fish farm in Volusia County extra
time to find out whether its unique operation as the only
American farm raising beluga sturgeon will be allowed. If
special regulations on imports and fish farming aren't completed
by October, an import ban and restrictions on the fish farm
could take effect.
"The species is not on the brink of extinction, but we are
concerned about it," said Roddy Gabel, chief of the agency's
division of scientific authority. However, the federal decision
disappointed environmentalists who want an immediate ban on
imports of the prized fish eggs, which retail for about $75
to $100 an ounce.
Beluga sturgeon numbered about 11.6 million in the Caspian
Sea in 2002, according to the Convention on International
Trade in Endangered Species, the international commission
that controls the caviar trade.
The legal caviar trade is thought to be worth more than $100
million a year. However, the fish population dramatically
plummeted after the fall of the Soviet Union due to overfishing
and poaching of the sturgeon to support a lucrative black
market in the gray fish eggs. The illegal trade is estimated
to be six to 10 times greater than the legal market.
Environmentalists have criticized the international effort
to control the sturgeon fishery and cite other studies that
show the fish stocks are declining. They hoped the beluga
would be declared endangered, prompting an immediate ban on
imports. That would be a huge blow to the industry because
Americans consume 80 percent of the world's beluga caviar.
"I'm disappointed to see the U.S. has not stepped up to the
plate and taken stronger action," said Ellen Pikitch, professor
and executive director of the University of Miami's Pew Institute
for Ocean Science.
However, international-trade expert Eugene Lapointe thinks
an import ban wouldn't help conservation. "I'm a strong believer
that you don't stop the illegitimate trade by stopping the
legal trade," said Lapointe, who is president of IWMC World
Conservation Trust, a coalition that promotes sustainable
use of natural resources. "You need the economic incentives
for the countries of the Caspian Sea to protect the sturgeon."
Lapointe on Tuesday was touring a Pierson farm that could
produce beluga caviar in several years. Miami fine-foods importer
Mark Zaslavsky started the farm last year, and it already
has dozens of sturgeon, beluga and others, from the Caspian.
Whether the farm can continue will depend on the federal regulations
that could be developed during the next six months, but Zaslavsky
is optimistic.
"There is no reason not to allow aquafarming of beluga sturgeon,"
Zaslavsky said. "Through this farming, I'm sure we can relieve
the pressure to fish the wild population."
Ludmilla Lelis can be reached
at llelis@orlandosentinel.com
or 386-253-0964. |