‘Not good’: Ocean advocacy group criticizes Canadian fishery management in audit
HALIFAX — Only about 25 per cent of Canada’s fish populations are considered healthy and the federal government is missing data on more than one-third of the country’s fisheries, according to an ocean conservation group.
Oceana Canada released its fourth annual fishery audit Tuesday, which said Canada has failed to uphold a commitment to maintain healthy fish stocks. “Unfortunately, the news is not good,” Robert Rangeley, science director at Oceana Canada, said in an interview Monday.
Since 2017, the number of healthy fish stocks in Canada dropped by nearly 8 per cent, the audit said, adding, “a mere 26.5 per cent are now considered healthy.” It said little progress had been made to grow fish populations that were already critically depleted — including shrimp, snow crab, and several forage fish, which drive much of the country’s fishing revenues.
The audit also noted that data from the Fisheries Department is missing for more than one-third of the almost 200 marine stocks, leaving industry and government, it said, to make decisions about some seafood species without adequate information.

