Fisheries body agrees to slash catch of endangered bluefin tuna; species likely still at risk
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The multi-nation fisheries body that monitors most of the Pacific Ocean has agreed to cut the catch of juvenile bluefin tuna to half of its average level in 2002-2004.
The Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission reached the decision Thursday as it ended an annual meeting in Fukuoka, a city in western Japan.
The commission, which monitors the western two-thirds of the Pacific, also endorsed catch limits for adult bluefin and set a 10-year target of rebuilding its population to 8 percent of its unfished size.
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Conservation group The Pew Charitable Trusts said the measures are encouraging but only a first step toward saving the species, which has been decimated by overfishing.
Japanese eat 80 percent of the world's bluefin tuna, or "hon maguro," a sushi mainstay.