‘It’s not like chicken farming’: why manta rays are chopped up in Sri Lanka


Source: theguardian.com theguardian.com

Key Topics in this News Article:

News Snapshot:

Every morning, starting at 3am, Lakshan hacks up manta rays. A wholesale buyer who plies his trade at Sri Lanka’s largest fish market, in the city of Negombo, just north of Colombo, he jostles with fishers offloading their catches. His business is primarily to find fresh tuna but he also buys 700kg (1,540lb) of manta and devil rays every day. He doesn’t want the ray’s meat, which most Sri Lankans don’t eat. Instead, he’s after the gill plates: cartilage that helps manta and devil rays filter out microorganisms in ocean waters. In a courtyard across from the market, Lakshan dries...