Sturgeon stocks in the Caspian Sea have fallen by 90 per cent in 30 years, prompting drastic action in the US
By David Usborne in New York
Published: 10 September 2005
The United States is expected to impose a blanket ban very shortly on the import of beluga caviar from the Caspian Sea region, in a move designed to prevent the delicacy from vanishing forever from melba toasts and fine bone china dishes because of drastic environmental damage and over-harvesting.
Beluga has long been considered the tastiest and most aristocratic of caviars, especially in the United States, which accounts for almost 80 per cent of consumption. But, last year, the US officially placed the fish that produces the rare roe, the beluga sturgeon, on its endangered species list.
More importantly, American wildlife officials also served notice earlier this year to several beluga-caviar nations that a ban would be instituted unless they each drew up management plans to protect the beluga sturgeon from extinction. The beluga can grow up to 4,000lbs and live a hundred years. The deadline for those plans to be completed and submitted for consideration by the United States had been set for 6 September and, so far, none have been received.
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/environment/article311557.ecehttp://news.independent.co.uk/world/environment/article311557.eceAzerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Iran, Russia and Turkmenistan.