Costa Rican government officials released information to The Billfish Foundation (TBF) of the seizure from a seafood exporter, of over 7,000 kilos of sailfish meat bound for Peru, according to a release by The Billfish Foundation. 

 

Sailfish are protected species in the popular Costa Rican fishery. Investigators from two agencies — SENASA (National Animal Health Service) and INCOPESCA (Costa Rican Fisheries and Aquaculture Institute) — seized 7012 kilos of whole sailfish carcasses. The company had falsified documents declaring the shipment as striped marlin which is presently a legal billfish for exporting.

 

The Billfish Foundation's (TBF) Chief Scientist Dr. Russell Nelson and TBF Central American Conservation Director Herbert Nanne received word of the seizure from Dr. Rolando Ramirez of INCOPESCA. Costa Rica Sport Fishing Federation (FECOPT) Executive Director Enrique Ramirez said in newspaper reports that illegal commercial fishing and the exporting of sailfish meat had been reported for months as FECOPT tried to get the authorities to take action. FECOPT was formed to represent the interests of its anglers and the sport fishing tourism industry.

 

Nelson and Nanne still have concerns regarding the vulnerability of sailfish that collect in certain areas along Costa Rica's coast. “We're told that if INCOPESCA wins this case,” said Nelson, “money from the sale of the meat would go to Costa Rica's National Guard for enforcement and oversight improvements to protect the fishery.” Tourism is Costa Rica's top industry and research showed North Americans traveling there in 2008 to fish generated $599 million – or two percent of Costa Rica's gross domestic product.

 

The 2009 study by TBF, Southwick Associates and the University of Costa Rica, revealed 283,790 anglers visited Costa Rica and their economic impact even overshadowed commercial fishing. Some 22 percent of those tourists visited the country to exclusively fish. Since 2008 Costa Rica has been proactive in enacting conservation laws and measures to control commercial overfishing. INCOPESCA passed measures protecting its sailfish and other sport fishing resources by putting a halt to the exportation of sailfish meat and stopped the use of live bait by the commercial long-liners.