
But that, as they say, is not that, because as with seemingly every story these, days Kimura's auction record-setting fish has a dark underbelly: the dwindling population of the Pacific bluefin tuna. From a conservation standpoint, Kimura's 466-pound, $632,000 fish isn't just a fun novelty, but a symbol of a growing problem surrounding the Pacific bluefin. The fish are being caught largely in juvenile stages of development owing to the preferences of the fishing industry and leading to a 97 percent drop in population according to Pew Charitable Trusts. This possible future catastrophe for the fish would be a big problem not just for the environment but for the fishing industry as well. As the huge yearly event that the Tsukiji fish market is every year – according to Jamie Gibbon, officer for global tuna conservation at the Pew Charitable Trusts reported in The Guardian, that's what "people should be thinking about that when they see news about the auction."
And even if a businessman Kiyoshi Kimura isn't likely to support environmental regulations, even he may find himself regretting the decline of Pacific bluefin if their increasing scarcity means he has to keep coughing up more and more money to take home the biggest one every year. He's already paying a lot: At this most recent auction, his $632,000 bid came to more than $1,300 a pound.
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