Sustainable fisheries, including through the 1995 Agreement for the Implementation of the Provisions of
the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea of 10 December 1982 relating to the Conservation
and Management of Straddling Fish Stocks and Highly Migratory Fish Stocks, and related instruments
A/RES/70/75
174. Acknowledges the serious environmental impacts on the marine
environment caused by abandoned, lost or otherwise discarded fishing gear, and
encourages States and regional fisheries manage ment organizations and
arrangements, as appropriate, to take action to reduce such gear, noting the
recommendations of the 2009 report by the United Nations Environment Programme
and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations;
175. Reaffirms the importance it attaches to paragraphs 77 to 81 of resolution
60/31 of 29 November 2005 concerning the issue of lost, abandoned or discarded
fishing gear and related marine debris and the adverse impacts such debris and
derelict fishing gear have on, inter alia, fish stocks, habitats and other marine
species, and urges accelerated progress by States and regional fisheries management
organizations and arrangements in implementing those paragraphs of the resolution;
176. Encourages further studies, including by the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations, on the impacts of underwater noise on fish
stocks and fishing catch rates, as well as associated socioeconomic effects;
177. Calls upon States, including through regional fisheries management
organizations and arrangements, to play an active role in global efforts to conserve
and sustainably use living marine resources, so as to contribute to marine biological
diversity;
178. Encourages States, either individually or through regional fisheries
management organizations and arrangements, as appropriate, to identify any
spawning and nursery areas for fish stocks under their jurisdiction or competence
and, where required, to adopt science-based measures to conserve such stocks
during these critical life stages;
179. Expresses concern about the recent massive influx of sargassum seaweed
into the waters of the Caribbean and its impact on aquatic resources, fisheries,
shorelines, waterways and tourism, and encourages States and relevant regional
organizations to cooperate to better understand the causes and impacts of the influx,
with a view to protecting the livelihoods of fishers and fishing communities and
finding ways of beneficially utilizing the seaweed and environmentally friendly
ways of disposing of sargassum washed up on shore;
180. Recognizes the wide range of impacts of ocean acidification on marine
ecosystems, and calls upon States to tackle the causes of ocean acidification and to
further study its impacts;
181. Emphasizes the importance of developing adaptive marine resource
management strategies and enhancing capacity-building to implement such
strategies in order to enhance the resilience of marine ecosystems to minimize the
wide range of impacts on marine organisms and threats to food security caused by
ocean acidification, in particular the impacts on the ability of calciferous plankton,
coral reefs, shellfish and crustaceans to build shells and skeletal structures and the
threats this could pose to protein supply;
XI
Capacity-building
182. Reiterates the crucial importance of cooperation by States directly or, as
appropriate, through the relevant subregional and regional organizations, and by
other international organizations, including the Food and Agriculture Organization
of the United Nations through its FishCode programme, including through financial
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