-
BTS draws over 100,000 fans to Seoul comeback concert: label
-
US-China 'Board of Trade' may help ties but experts flag market worries
-
Sinner, defending champ Mensik advance to third round at Miami Open
-
Iran missile strikes wound over 100 in two south Israel towns
-
Shai hits 40 as Thunder win despite NBA melee with four ejected
-
Records shattered as US heatwave moves eastward
-
Iran missiles hit southern Israel, injuring more than 100
-
LeBron James breaks record for most NBA games played
-
'Perfect' PSG sweep past Nice to reclaim top spot in Ligue 1
-
Japan coach says Asian Cup crown 'well-deserved' for inspirational team
-
PSG sweep past Nice to reclaim top spot in Ligue 1
-
Robert Mueller, ex-FBI chief who led Trump-Russia probe, dead at 81
-
Milan move to within five points of Serie A leaders Inter
-
Duplantis masterclass as Kerr and record-setter Ehammer shine
-
Rosenior urges Chelsea to 'forget the noise' after damaging loss
-
Marquez ambushed Di Giannantonio to win Brazil sprint
-
Sweden's Duplantis wins fourth world indoor pole vault title
-
Liverpool, Chelsea slip up in Champions League race
-
WHO sends first overland convoy from emergencies hub to Beirut
-
Everton rub salt in Chelsea wounds as Champions League race tightens
-
Coach Mignoni returns but Toulon crash to Stade Francais
-
Robert Mueller, ex-FBI chief who led Trump-Russia inquiry, dead at 81
-
Sinner and Pegula advance to third round at Miami Open
-
Britain's Kerr outsprints Hocker for world indoor 3,000m gold
-
Kane backs Tuchel's call to rest him from England friendly
-
NBA fines 76ers' Drummond, Magic's Suggs $25,000 each
-
Switzerland's Ehammer sets indoor heptathlon world record
-
Pogacar 'relieved' by Milan-San Remo triumph, gunning to complete Monument set
-
World Athletics decision to hand Asia two world indoors 'strategic' - Coe
-
Trump threatens to use ICE agents for airport security control
-
Kane moves closer to goals record as Bayern sink Union
-
Pogacar ends long wait for Milan-San Remo glory after edging epic
-
US says 'took out' Iran base threatening blocked Hormuz oil route
-
Di Giannantonio takes Brazil MotoGP pole ahead of Bezzecchi, Marquez
-
Welbeck scores twice to dent Liverpool's top-five hopes
-
US strikes Iran bases threatening blocked Hormuz oil route
-
Pirovano wins World Cup downhill title, Aicher puts pressure on Shiffrin
-
Doroshchuk wins Ukraine's second world indoor gold, Hodgkinson and Alfred coast
-
K-pop kings BTS stun Seoul in '2.0' comeback concert
-
French prosecutors suspect Musk encouraged deepfakes row to inflate X value
-
Mbappe 100 percent, Bellingham fit, says Real Madrid's Arbeloa
-
Iranians mark Eid as Tehran reports strike on nuclear plant
-
Kenya, Uganda open rail extension burdened by Chinese debt
-
K-pop kings BTS rock Seoul in comeback concert
-
Invincible Japan edge Australia to win Women's Asian Cup
-
Italy's Paris claims first win of season in World Cup downhill finale
-
In Finland, divers learn to explore icy polar waters
-
Dortmund extend injured captain Can's contract
-
Iranians mark Eid as Trump mulls winding down war
-
Matisse's last years cut out -- but not pasted -- at Paris expo
'Where are the mackerel?' Alarm as Bosphorus fish stocks crash
Despondent Sunday anglers watch crestfallen as a trawler winches an enormous net out of the waters of the Bosphorus.
"Clear off!" they shout from the shore, impatient to get their hooks back into the depths of the strait that runs through Istanbul.
"I have been here since 6 am but a trawler came and dropped its nets. That blocked us completely," grumbled Mehmet Dogan, fed-up at only having caught one fish all day, a 40-centimetre (16-inch) bonito.
It is high season for the popular variety of tuna, with shoals teeming through the Bosphorus on their way from the Black Sea to the Mediterranean.
But pulled taut across the strait are fishing nets more than a kilometre (3,280 feet) long.
Anglers like Dogan who cram shoulder to shoulder along the banks say the nets leave them with little chance -- and the fish with even less.
Fish stocks in the Bosphorus have plummeted, according to Saadet Karakulak of Istanbul University. In the space of a few years, hauls have fallen from 500,000 to 600,000 tonnes a year to 328,000 tonnes, she said, saying it is "proof that stocks are diminishing".
"Because of these boats, the fish can't enter the Bosphorus," rued angler Murat Ayhanoglu, standing at Kirecburnu cove on the European side. "They can't leave their eggs here."
Nearby on the Gorenler II, a 35-metre trawler, the crew heaved in a net weighed down with fish.
There's no chance of catching anything when boats like that are here, said Ayhanoglu, as he reeled off a list of fish getting ever rarer in the Bosphorus -- horse mackerel, anchovy, picarel and bluefish.
- 'Race to overfish' -
But the dramatic fall in stocks didn't stop the government trying to close the strait to traffic for half a day this month to give free rein to commercial fishing boats.
The transport ministry later backed down after protests from scientists and campaigners about the "race to overfish" what they term is a biologically important "corridor".
"You can't do that. Stocks are in danger... We need sustainability," said Bayram Ozturk, head of the marine biology department at Istanbul University.
He said it was high time for quotas on some species, with the anchovy currently threatened.
Plastic waste, pollution and heavy maritime traffic are also blighting fish stocks in one of the world's business shipping lanes, warned Ozturk, who is also director of the Turkish Marine Research Foundation.
From container ships to tankers to bulk carriers transporting badly needed Ukrainian cereals to world markets, more than 200 ships a day pass through the Bosphorus.
With the strait only 760 metres wide at its narrowest point, Ozturk said fish stocks need to be managed by the region's nations.
"Fish don't have a passport. They spawn on the Ukrainian side (of the Black Sea), travel to the Turkish side", he said, and might end up being eaten on Greek island.
- 'We have to make sacrifices' -
Competition between trawlers is "ferocious", said captain Serkan Karadeniz as his boat waited to leave the quay to fish for bonito, having chased them all the way from its home port of Samsun on Turkey's northern coast.
The Gorenler has come from all the way from Canakkale on the Aegean Sea.
"October to November is when the fish migrate the most, to the Marmara and Aegean" seas, said Erdogan Kartal, head of Istanbul's fishery cooperative.
The 60-year-old, who has been fishing since he was a lad, said fish "are getting smaller and smaller.
"We have started to catch fish that have never had the chance to spawn, which is dangerous."
He no longer sees the mackerel that were once so abundant.
"Where are the beautiful mackerel that we used to eat every day?" Kartal lamented, saying quota and size limits had to be set.
"We have to make some sacrifices," he said. "If we let the fish pass, they will return."
W.Lapointe--BTB