The Hagfishery of Japan

Abstract
A commercial fishery for the Pacific hagfish, Eptatretus stouti, has begun on the American and Canadian Pacific coasts and fisheries agencies are trying to develop policies for its regulation. The principal use of the hagfishery is to supply skins for the production of “eelskin” leather, an industry that is centered in South Korea. The only available data that may guide development of hagfishery policies are in the scattered records for three areas in Japan: the coast near Niigata on the Japan Sea; the eastern coast of Honshu Island; and Tsushima, an island midway between South Korea and Kyushu Island, Japan. The Niigata area no longer supports a commercially viable hagfishery, although it once was a primary source of hagfish used as food. The eastern Honshu fishery, after about 30 years of exploitation by both Japanese and Korean fishermen, appears to be undepleted and catch sizes seem to be stable. The Tsushima Island hagfishery is relatively new and small in size. The number of Japanese boats ...

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