Page 197 - Truncal States to UAE_Neat
P. 197

Chapter Five

                Peninsula was caughl alive near Masafi at the head of the Wadi Ham,
                 and presented to London Zoo.,r* Its local name could not be verified.
                 Another type of mountain goat, Arabian taher or wa'al (Latin
                 hemitragus jayakari) has been reported to live on the Jabal Haiti as
                well as the Jabal al Akhdar in Oman. Lions used to live in the  area,
                particularly in the mountains, but have not been reported during the
                last few hundred years. The shells of ostrich eggs are found
                 occasionally in the desert but it is believed to be some fifty years or
                more since ostriches have been seen alive.

                Fishing
                Between them the seven shaikhdoms have 540 kilometres of
                coastline. The east coast facing the Gulf of Oman consists of long
                stretches of sweeping beaches and sandy bays intersected in places
                where the barren Hajar mountains reach into the sea. A few rocky
                islands are within sight of the coast. The chief characteristics of the
                western coast facing the Gulf proper are shallow waters near the
                shore, islands, sandbanks, lagoons, reefs and tidal channels which
                rendered much of the coast before the construction of modern
                harbours inaccessible to all but the people who regularly fished in
                that area.
                  The fishing potential on both shores is very high. The southern
                part of the Gulf is particularly productive during September to
                March, when cooler, less saline and biologically enriched waters
                from the Indian Ocean penetrate through the Straits of Hormuz for
                about 160 kilometres along the coast from Ra’s al Khaimah to Dubai.
                The water brings with it large numbers of pelagic fish such as tuna,
                bonilo, mackerel, sardines and anchovy.
                  The Gulf of Oman coast is even richer in fish because there is a
                constant upwelling of water from deep down in the contiguous
                Indian Ocean which helps the abundant growth of plankton.
                Fishermen do not need to go out very far to secure a good catch;
                consequently deep sea fishing has not been developed. Trawling for
                demersal fish is not so productive because the continental shelf is
                narrow and the grounds are not suitable. For most people in the
                Trucial States fish has often been almost the only source of protein.
                There have been fish markets and auctions in most towns and
                villages on the coast, where fresh fish could be bought by those who
                did not go fishing themselves. But a large amount of fish protein
                reached the population in the hinterland only in rather inferior  sun-

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