A curious South African sea snail is a prized dish in Asia. That has meant a trail of destruction
HAWSTON, South Africa (AP) Nearly every house in Hawston has a boat in its yard, sometimes two.
It takes a moment to realize many are out of action, grass sprouting through holes in hulls that havent touched water for years. They are relics of another time, when people fished for their livelihood and the ocean provided more than enough.
Those languishing boats and other economic problems in Hawston are the result of changes in the market to South African abalone, a curious fist-sized sea snail that is a highly prized morsel in East Asia and the unwitting instigator of 30 years of trouble for fishing communities along Africas southern coast. Abalone here was abundant and especially tasty, yet the demand largely put the village and its traditional fishers out of business, or made them criminals overnight.
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But over the last three decades, poachers have swept in and swept up every snail they could find every sackful a fat payday. They can get $50 a kilogram. Its reduced the endangered South African abalone to unprecedented low levels, wildlife groups say.
https://apnews.com/article/south-africa-abalone-hong-kong-poaching-3f63be4b5527178908c6013d5413f1e7