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100

The country has full ownership. 

Territorial Sea

100

Sampling and estimating fish populations. 

Monitoring

100

Annual catch limits are established at or below the maximum sustainable yield for each fishery. 

Quotas 

100

Must be minimized to the "extent practicable." 

Bycatch

100

Country the fish was caught from. 

Source 

200

The country owns all fishing and mineral rights. 

Exclusive Economic Zone

200

Parts of the ocean where no organisms can legally be harvested. 

Marine Reserves 

200
Netted areas that fish are raised in from eggs. 

Fish pens 

200

Food, antibiotics, and supplements. 

Inputs 

200

Whether the fish was wild-caught or farmed via aquaculture. 

Method

300

No single country has governance. 

International Waters 

300

Fish sewage, coliform bacteria. 

Waste products 

300

Grows organisms lower trophic levels in the fish waste stream. 

Multi-trophic aquaculture 

300

Uses the nitrogen cycle to grow both plants and fish together in the same system. 

Aquaponics

300

Audited by the Marine Stewardship Council for sustainable practices. 

MSC Certification 

400

An international trade agreement that prohibits or limits trade of certain species, based on conservation status. 

The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) 

400

Prohibits the taking of mammals that rely on the ocean to survive. 

The Marine Mammal Protection Act 

400

Prevents the "taking" of any species identified and listed which includes bycatch. 

The Endangered Species Act 

400

Fish release waste, which bacteria decompose into ammonia. 

Ammonification

500

The federal law that regulates all ocean fishing in the United States. 

The Magnuson-Stevenson Fishery Conservation and Management Act (MSA) 

500

Different bacteria convert into nitrates. 

Nitrification 

500

Uptake of nitrates into plants through roots. 

Assimilation