No it shouldn't people put money into finding other jobs when it closed! Eventually the cod number will go down again and people will have to go back to school to find other jobs. People don't want to go threw the same thing their parents or that they have already went threw!
fishing The cod fishery (producing salt cod), the seal fishery (producing oil for lamps mostly), being England's oldest colony (a dubious fact at best).
They are still there albeit at a much lower yield than 25 years ago. It varies from region to region. This answer is for Atlantic cod, there is Pacific cod too: Good stock size and fishery: Barents Sea, Icelandic shelf Reduced stock size and fishery: North Sea, Baltic Sea Low stock size, small fishery: Gulf of St Lawrence, southern Newfoundland, western Scotian Shelf, Georges Bank Collapsed: Eastern Newfoundland, eastern Scotian Shelf Probable collapses in the next few years: western Scotian Shelf, southern Gulf of St. Lawrence, southern Newfoundland
Probably Portugal. Portugese fishermen founded the Newfoundland cod fishery. However Norwegian fishermen were catching and salting /air drying cod fish caught in the North Sea long before the Grand Banks were discovered.
stop fishing.
Cod fish
oui that means yes Jamie Stewart jones
These populations of these fish species are all related through the ocean food web
the reason is because too many people were Fishing in the same spot so the cod couldn't reproduce fast enough. this is why they became endangered
when men from jersey decided to go to Newfoundland to trade with them from there they decided to go to Brazil, Spain, Italy and Guernsey. Then the cod triangle developed
The cod fish near Newfoundland disappeared because humans did overfishing. The Europeans bought large fish and instead of the ships going 5 km away, they could go 350 km away!!! More of the fish were caught. Also HUGE! ships were involved in the cod catching.
Acadia is where the great deportation took place. The french gave over Acadia in a treaty and kept their small cod fishery.
A. Edmonston has written: 'Observations on the nature and extent of the cod fishery, carried on off the coasts of the Zetland and Orkney Isles'