The East China Sea was officially closed for fishing on May 1.
At Shipu Pier in Xiangshan County, rows of fishing boats docked at their berths in an orderly manner.
"The most important work of the fishing season is to overhaul the fishing boats, including the machinery, to meet the opening of fishing in September in the best condition," Chen Haibing, a 54-year-old fisherman, said.
The fishing moratorium means some fishermen's income would be reduced. Chen believes that the fishing moratorium is to ensure that there will be high-quality fish to catch in the future. Moreover, fishermen now have a strong sense of ecological protection, and if they catch protected animals such as sea turtles, they will release them as requested.
"Sometimes, we go to sea for a month, and the fishing moratorium allows us to take a break and reunite with our families." On the shore of the pier, a fisherman said that some of his peers will choose to go home to see their relatives and friends during the fishing moratorium, some will do odd jobs to provide for their families, and the local government will also hold activities such as sports games and skills training to enrich their lives.
During the fishing moratorium, it is banned to sell eight types of wild live and chilled seafood, including hairtail and yellow croaker. However, for the first week after the fishing moratorium starts, the market can still sell seafood from the East China Sea, but the prices are on the expensive side.
In Ningbo wholesale aquatic products market, the total amount of frozen and chilled products in storage exceeded 10,000 tons, including 190 tons of live fresh, 8,820 tons of frozen products, and 1,710 tons of dried products, quite enough for the people's consumption demand for aquatic products.
Frozen products, aquaculture products, and exotic catches will be the three main supply sources of sea food during the fishing moratorium. In addition, offshore seafood is not affected by the fishing moratorium. Farmed seafood which has developed rapidly in recent years will be available in large quantities. There are also imported king crabs and salmon from the North Pacific Ocean and Southeast Asia that will be continuously supplied to the market.