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Polling
Bycatch


Fish or animals that are accidentally caught in commercial fishing operations are called bycatch. These dead or dying creatures are usually discarded overboard. Studies show fisheries now throw away about 23% of all the fish, crustaceans, and mollusks they catch. This translates into more than tens of millions of edible fish and drowned animals each year. The use of large mesh gillnets by a single California fishery is responsible for 90% of the dolphins and porpoises killed along the West Coast and Alaska. Bycatch includes marine mammals, turtles, striped marlin, bluefin tuna and sharks - at least 20% of which are already dead upon release. Marine advocates say the loss of young fish greatly limits the ability of a species to breed successfully.

It is estimated that hundreds of whales, dolphins and porpoises drown each day after becoming entangled in nets and other fishing gear. Nearly 20% of all shark species are facing extinction from inadvertent long-line and gillnet capture, and as many as 250,000 unwanted loggerhead and leatherback turtles are also killed this way each year. Advocates say these commercial fishing practices are not sustainable and are endangering the health of the oceans.

Pending Legislation: H.R.3718 - Sustaining America’s Fisheries for the Future Act of 2025
Sponsor: Rep. Jared Huffman (CA)
Status: Referred to the House Committees on Natural Resources, and Agriculture, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker
House Speaker: Speaker Mike Johnson (LA)











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Poll Opening Date
November 3, 2025
Poll Closing Date
November 9, 2025