The
 United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) has released a report 
cautioning of the significant risk to these marine mammals especially by
 large-scale fishing operations. 
The study stated that 86% of 
all toothed-whale cetaceans are seriously threatened by entanglement or 
capture in gillnets, driftnets, trawls and other types of fishing gear. 
As
 an example, the scientists cited China’s Baiji River Dolphin, which has
 not been sighted for many years in the Yangtze River, as well as the 
Vaquita porpoise residing in the northern Gulf of California, whose 
population has diminished to only 150 remaining in the wild. Both of 
these species have perished in high numbers due to entanglements in 
fishing gear. 
UNEP Executive Secretary Elizabeth Mrema stated 
that governments need to increase their efforts to implement protective 
policies for the survival of the cetacean species. 
Our earnest 
appreciation United Nations Environment Program for revealing the impact
 of fishing’s detrimental practices on our unique marine mammal friends.
 May all countries join in acting now to protect the lives of these and 
all precious fellow beings. 
In her tireless endeavors to ensure 
the welfare of the Earth’s inhabitants, Supreme Master Ching Hai has 
often emphasized the need to halt fishing, as during a November 2008 
interview with Ireland’s East Coast Radio FM.
Supreme Master Ching Hai:
 We have to stop it. Just stop the fishing. The government has to forbid
 fishing because it’s too important to our survival to delay any 
further. 
Not only is there overfishing and depleting of  marine 
life, but there is also side killing. Like when the commercial long 
liners go fishing, 
they’re killing tens of thousands of sea 
turtles, by the way, and hundreds of thousands of sea birds and millions
 of sharks every year. 
To stop this destructive practice of 
fishing, the solution is the vegan diet, no fishy stuff in our meals. 
The sea offers us plenty of better food choices; the wide varieties of 
super healthy and nutritious sea plants. 
We can even live on it forever.  We must protect a living and healthy sea, as it relates to our living and healthy self. 
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=33677&Cr=unep&Cr1= http://www.physorg.com/news184500664.htmlhttp://www.cms.int/reports/small_cetaceans/general_summary.htm http://www.answers.com/topic/odontocetes