On the weekend of July 20-21, Earth Ocean Farms released 40,000 juvenile 3-4 month-old-totoabas at Bahía de Concepción in Baja California South. “I can guarantee that the totoaba will never go extinct ...
Saturday, Apr 28, 2018 5:04 AM Updated Saturday, Apr. 28, 2018 12:43 PM I learned about two sea creatures while vacationing this spring near Puerto Peñasco in Mexico. By coincidence, we were close to ...
The vaquita, the world’s smallest and most endangered whale, is nearly extinct due to China’s demand for the swim bladders, also known as ‘maws,’ from a giant Mexican fish called totoaba. With ...
This article was originally published at Hakai Magazine. In April, Mexico’s Upper Gulf of California is a place of light. Nothing blocks the sun on its arc across the sky. It glares from the green ...
After a 40-year prohibition, international wildlife trade regulator CITES has authorized the export of captive-bred totoaba fish from Mexico. Conservationists say they fear this decision will ...
Dried swim bladders of totoabas (also called “maw”) have been dubbed “aquatic cocaine” due to the high prices they fetch mainly in Chinese markets. Illegal trade in the swim bladder of the totoabas, ...
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