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La pêche du thon ("Tuna Fishing") etching by Jean-Pierre Houël, 1782, depicting a Sicilian almadraba.

Almadraba ( Andalusian Arabic: المَضْرَٰبَة, romanized: al-maḍraba, lit.'the place to strike'; Portuguese: almadrava) is an elaborate and ancient technique for trapping and catching Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) originally used by the Phoenicians and developed to its current form in southeastern Iberia during the Islamic period. [1]

The technique, in its most simple iteration, consists in setting up net barriers so as to trap the tuna when they migrate into the Mediterranean Sea from the Atlantic Ocean (February to July), on their way to spawn and until recently, on their return journey, ("al revés"); the bycatch contains, among others, bullet tuna (auxis rochei), little tunny (euthynnus alletteratus), Atlantic bonito (sarda sarda), bigeye tuna (thunnus obesus) and swordfish (xiphias gladius).

Graveyard of Anchors on Tavira island which were used in the Almadrava

It is a traditional form of fishing practiced mainly in southeastern Spain ( Andalusia, Murcia and southern Valencian Community), Morocco and southern Portugal (the Algarve). [2] [3] Almadrabas have been set from the ports of Cádiz, Chiclana de la Frontera, [4] Conil de la Frontera, Barbate, Rota, Zahara de los Atunes, La Línea de la Concepción, Nueva Umbría, Isla Cristina, Ceuta and Tarifa, among other ports.

A similar technique exists in Sicily known as mattanza (a borrowing from the Spanish word matanza, meaning 'slaughter'), introduced either by the Moors during Sicily's own Islamic period or by the Spanish afterwards.

In film

See also

References

  1. ^ "Las almadrabes y Chiclana".
  2. ^ "almadraba". Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima segunda edición (in Spanish). Real Academia Española. 2001.
  3. ^ "The future of the almadraba sector – traditional tuna fishing methods in the eu" (PDF). Retrieved 30 May 2017.
  4. ^ "Las almadrabes y Chiclana" (in Spanish). Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved July 13, 2014.