-
Sinner sets up Fonseca clash, Zverev advances at Indian Wells
-
Sharp drop in Chinese military aircraft near Taiwan raises questions
-
Gauff retires with 'scary' injury to send Eala through at Indian Wells
-
Mojtaba Khamenei: son and successor to Iran's supreme leader
-
Wemby shines as Spurs thrash Rockets, Lakers down Knicks
-
Troubled Spurs haunted by European ghosts in Atletico clash
-
Double super-over drama to Allen's record ton: T20 World Cup moments
-
Liverpool go back to Galatasaray cauldron in Champions League last 16
-
Pressure builds for Australia to offer Iran women's football team asylum
-
Hezbollah says fighting Israeli forces who landed in east Lebanon
-
France to host G7 finance meeting on Mideast
-
One year after arrest, Turkey opposition champion Imamoglu goes on trial
-
Newcastle eye history in Champions League clash with Barcelona
-
Mercedes set gold standard at Australian GP but new F1 rules 'suck'
-
Fake AI satellite imagery spurs US-Iran war disinformation
-
Oscar nominee Benicio del Toro says 'One Battle' has 'heart'
-
Shelter rankings and shower-timing apps: Israelis, Palestinians adjust to Iranian rockets
-
Sinner eases past Shapovalov, Zverev advances at Indian Wells
-
Trump defends Iran war decision as oil soars above $100
-
Doncic, Reaves lead Lakers over Knicks
-
Osaka tops Osorio to set Indian Wells Sabalenka clash
-
Brilliant Bhatia snatches Arnold Palmer victory in playoff
-
Genesis GV60 Magma before launch
-
Macron to visit Cyprus as French warships deploy to counter Iran threat
-
Milan edge derby to trim Inter's Serie A lead
-
Speed cameras: Brazen rip-off or necessary?
-
10 vessels attacked in Hormuz Strait: analysts
-
Germany: Electric car boom remains fragile
-
Iran names Khamenei's son as new supreme leader
-
NY police say device thrown near anti-Islam protest was homemade bomb
-
Gambhir lauds India's 'courage' after T20 World Cup triumph
-
Zverev holds off Nakashima to reach Indian Wells fourth round
-
Germany: Fuel rage and the 2026 election year
-
In Istanbul, despite ban, thousands march for Women's Day
-
Sabalenka sails into Indian Wells last 16
-
Aaja Chemnitz, Greenland politician standing up to Trump
-
NY police say device thrown near anti-Islam protest was IED
-
A life of surf and snow for Winter Paralympian Micevicius
-
Cem Ozdemir, Germany's Turkish-heritage political star
-
Thousands march for women's rights and against Mideast war
-
India crush New Zealand to win third T20 World Cup title
-
Pixar's 'Hoppers' jumps to top of N. America box office
-
American Lamperti edges Paris-Nice opener
-
Hecking tasked with saving freefalling Wolfsburg after Bauer sacked
-
Lens close in on PSG with win over lowly Metz
-
Possible terror motive in US embassy blast, say Norway police
-
Israel strikes Beirut hotel as Lebanon says war toll nears 400
-
Port Vale stun Sunderland, Southampton beat Fulham in FA Cup shocks
-
India pile up 255-5 against New Zealand in T20 World Cup final
-
US says it will not hit Iran energy sector
Huge groupers, the joy of Florida divers, are now 'vulnerable'
The goliath grouper, a colossus of a fish that can weigh up to 360 kilograms (nearly 800 pounds), is the delight of divers in Florida, though scientists warn their numbers are down since the US state allowed fishing of the giants resume.
"There's nowhere else you can have an experience with a fish that big while you're diving -- and being this close to it," Dr. James Locascio, a marine biologist with the Mote Marine Laboratory, told AFP.
"And so, really, we feel that the fish is worth a lot more alive than it is dead."
During a sea trip early this month off Boynton Beach, on Florida's Atlantic coast north of Miami, divers were amazed by these giants, which can measure up to 2.4 meters (eight feet) long.
With naturally down-turned mouths, these creatures may appear cranky, but some actually allow themselves to be brushed by a human hand.
- 'Fewer and fewer' -
"We were totally amazed about the amount of groupers that show up to the Boynton Beach area," diver Ben Galemmo told AFP.
Still, he added, "from talking to the locals, (the population) has actually gone down in numbers" in recent years.
A recent study confirms that trend.
"The diving industry has reported that they are seeing fewer and fewer of these fish," said Locascio, the marine biologist.
That could devastate the local diving business.
Last year, when researchers with the Mote laboratory repeated a census of spawning sites first conducted in 2013, they observed significantly fewer goliath groupers in five of the six locations studied.
Overfishing had left the species near extinction in the 1980s, but conservation efforts saved it. Goliath grouper fishing was banned for more than 30 years.
But in the past year Florida authorities deemed the population had recovered sufficiently, and allowed 200 of the fish to be caught and killed each year in state waters.
Unfortunately, the goliath grouper lends itself to overfishing partly because it grows slowly -- it can live as long as 30 years -- and takes a relatively long time to reproduce.
The goliath is now classed as a "vulnerable" species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, according to Locascio.
Calling the fish "an essential species for maintaining the balance of the ecosystem," he added, "We do not want its population to decline."
The huge fish also lives in the waters of the Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean, and off the coast of Brazil.
D.Schlegel--VB