Guest guest Posted July 1, 2004 Report Share Posted July 1, 2004 opinion.telegraph.co.uk By Charles Clover (Filed: 01/07/2004) Imagine what those animal welfare people would say if a band of hunters strung a mile of net between two vast all-terrain vehicles and dragged it across the plains of Africa. This fantastical assemblage, like something from a Mad Max movie, would scoop up everything in its way: lions, cheetahs, elephants, rhinos, impala, wildebeest and wild dogs. Only the smallest juveniles would be able to wriggle through the mesh. The effect of dragging a net with an iron bar across its mouth across the plains is to break off every outcrop and uproot every bush, stirring columns of birds into the air. Left behind is a landscape like a harrowed field. The industrial hunter-gatherers stop to examine the tangled mess of writhing or dead creatures behind them. Some are too small, too mangled, or the wrong species. These are dumped on the plain to be consumed by carrion. This efficient but unselective way of killing animals is called trawling. It is practised the world over each day, from the Barents Sea to the shores of Antarctica, and from the tropical waters of the Indian Ocean to Cape Cod. Yet, because what fishermen do is obscured by a veil of water and because fish are cold-blooded rather than cuddly, most people think of what happens at sea differently from what happens on land. full story: http://www.opinion.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml? xml=/opinion/2004/07/01/do0101.xml & sSheet=/opinion/2004/07/01/ixopinio n.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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