Mattanza
Mattanza, derived from the Spanish word matar meaning "to kill," denotes the ritualistic slaughter phase of traditional bluefin tuna fishing in Sicily and other Mediterranean regions, employing a fixed labyrinth of nets known as a tonnara to trap and herd migrating schools into a final death chamber.[1][2] This ancient technique, traceable to Phoenician origins and refined through Arab and Spanish influences, culminates in fishermen raising the net chamber aboard boats, where tuna are dispatched with gaffs amid chants led by the rais, the expedition's captain.[3][4] Once a cornerstone of Sicilian coastal economies, particularly around Favignana and Carloforte, the practice sustained communities for millennia by selectively harvesting during seasonal migrations but has sharply declined since the late 20th century due to industrial overfishing, international quotas, and shifting market demands for sushi-grade tuna.[2][5] Despite its efficiency and cultural reverence—evident in songs and ceremonies symbolizing harmony with the sea—modern conservation pressures have rendered most tonnare obsolete, with the last full mattanza in Sicily occurring in 2007.[6][7]Historical Development
Ancient Origins and Early Techniques
The practice of trapping migratory Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) in the Mediterranean traces its origins to Phoenician innovations around 3000 years ago, with early fixed-net systems akin to the later almadraba and tonnara documented along coasts from North Africa to southern Iberia.[8] Phoenician traders exploited seasonal tuna migrations through the Strait of Gibraltar, constructing labyrinthine weirs from reeds, stakes, and rudimentary nets to channel schools into enclosed areas for capture, facilitating trade in salted or preserved fish across the region.[9] These techniques emphasized passive herding rather than active pursuit, leveraging tidal currents and tuna behavior to minimize effort while maximizing yield, as evidenced by archaeological remains of processing factories and amphorae used for export.[10] Carthaginian (Punic) adaptations extended this system into the western Mediterranean by the 6th century BCE, incorporating multi-chambered traps that progressively narrowed to a killing zone, where fish were speared or clubbed en masse—a precursor to the mattanza slaughter.[11] Literary and iconographic sources, including reliefs and texts from Punic sites, depict fishermen using long poles and boats to drive tuna into terminal enclosures, with the process often tied to communal rituals reflecting the scale of hauls that could number in the thousands during peak migrations.[9] This method's efficiency supported early commercialization, producing garum-like preserves and dried tuna for export to Greece and beyond, underscoring its economic primacy over hook-and-line alternatives.[10] By the time of Greek colonization in Sicily around the 8th century BCE, tuna trapping had become widespread, with traps sited at strategic coastal points to intercept spawning runs; early Greek accounts describe similar net mazes leading to slaughter pens, though stone or wooden barriers supplemented nets in shallower waters.[12] Roman expansion further refined these techniques, integrating them into imperial supply chains, but core principles—fixed installations, sequential chambers, and mass killing—remained consistent with Phoenician prototypes, as confirmed by fishery locations in historical records predating medieval Arabic influences.[10] Such systems yielded hauls sufficient to sustain local populations and trade, with annual cycles dictated by lunar phases and water temperatures guiding trap deployment.Medieval to Modern Evolution in Sicily and Sardinia
In Sicily, the tonnara system underlying the mattanza evolved during the medieval period under Arab rule from the 9th to 11th centuries, when advanced labyrinthine net traps were likely introduced or refined, drawing from North African techniques to channel migrating Atlantic bluefin tuna into killing chambers.[10] This method persisted and expanded under Norman conquest in the 11th century, with documentary evidence of tuna traps in coastal areas by the 12th century, integrating into feudal economies where lords granted fishing rights. By the late medieval and early modern eras, tonnare proliferated along Sicily's western and southern coasts, such as at Favignana and Trapani, peaking in the 18th century with over 20 active sites producing salted and preserved tuna for export to Europe.[13] Sardinia's tonnara development lagged slightly behind Sicily's medieval advancements, with formal establishment occurring in 1587 under Spanish King Philip II, who authorized traps primarily along the southwestern coast to exploit seasonal tuna migrations, building on earlier Pisan and Genoese influences from the 11th-14th centuries that emphasized coastal defense towers adjacent to fishing grounds.[14] The system expanded in the 17th and 18th centuries, reaching 18 active tonnare by the late 1600s, often managed by Genoese entrepreneurs who introduced specialized labor divisions, including the rais as trap commander.[14] Conservation techniques advanced in the 19th century, with oil and tin preservation starting in 1868, supporting up to 23 operational sites by century's end and fueling local economies through trade in preserved tuna.[14] From the late 19th to mid-20th centuries, both islands experienced a boom followed by decline in traditional mattanza practices due to overexploitation, industrialization, and competition from mechanized purse-seine fishing. In Sicily, tonnare output surged post-unification in 1861 but waned after World War II, with many sites like those near Syracuse closing by the early 1900s and the last active traps phasing out by the 1980s amid regulatory quotas and stock depletion.[15] Sardinia mirrored this trajectory, with strikes in the 1960s signaling labor unrest and environmental pressures from mining pollution; by 1977, sites like Porto Paglia shuttered due to fisherman shortages, leaving only three principal tonnare operational into the 21st century, such as Carloforte, which caught 111 tuna in 2008 before shifting toward sustainable and touristic models.[14] This evolution reflects a transition from labor-intensive, ritualistic harvesting to regulated, technology-driven fisheries, preserving cultural elements amid ecological constraints.[10]The Tonnara Fishing System
Construction and Operation of Traps
The tonnara trap is a sophisticated underwater net system anchored to the seabed, consisting of nets, cables, chains, anchors, and floats arranged in a parallelepipedal structure with 5 to 8 consecutive chambers separated by curtain doors.[11] The system is fixed at depths of 30 to 40 meters on sandy or algae-covered seabeds, with a perpendicular weir net channeling migrating bluefin tuna into the initial chamber.[11] In traditional Sicilian setups, finer meshes like the spissu net—woven tightly by local women—are incorporated for durability and selectivity.[13] Construction begins annually in spring, when skilled fishermen deploy the nets from boats in coastal straits, following precise rituals of gestures and incantations to ensure proper alignment and tension.[13] The chambers progressively narrow, forming a labyrinth: an outer square or enclosure leads to smaller intermediate sections, culminating in the leva or chamber of death, often equipped with a netted floor to contain fish.[11][16] During operation, the passive trap exploits seasonal tuna migrations peaking from late May to early June; lookouts monitor schools entering the outer chambers, signaling fishermen to close internal doors and funnel fish through successive compartments using minimal disturbance.[11] Trapped tuna accumulate in the final chamber, where nets are raised via pulleys or hooks for the subsequent mattanza slaughter, with fish transferred to boats or cages.[16][11] This method relies on the tuna's coastal swimming habits, minimizing active pursuit while maximizing capture efficiency in fixed locations.[11]The Mattanza Slaughter Process
The mattanza, meaning "slaughter" in Italian and derived from the Spanish "matar" (to kill), refers to the culminating phase of the tonnara tuna trap system where trapped bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) are killed in the final net chamber known as the camera della morte (chamber of death).[1] This process occurs seasonally from May to June, coinciding with the tuna migration through Sicilian waters, particularly off the Egadi Islands.[17] Directed by the rais, the experienced captain who coordinates via hand signals, chants, and observation tools like a viewing mask, the slaughter involves 30-40 fishermen maneuvering boats to manipulate nets and dispatch the fish.[14] The slaughter begins with the progressive raising of the chamber's floor net, executed simultaneously by multiple boats to reduce the tuna's swimming space and force them upward toward the surface.[14] As the water foams from the tuna's struggles—typically schools of fish averaging 200 kg (440 lbs) each—fishermen enter the netted area to hook the tuna through the mouth or gills using gaffs and spears.[1] [17] The hooked fish are then hoisted onto the main boat, where they are stabbed precisely under the pectoral fin to induce rapid bleeding and death; burlap bags may be placed over the eyes to calm larger specimens.[14] Undersized tuna below approximately 30 kg are released back into the sea.[14] The water in the chamber turns blood-red during the intense activity, reflecting the scale of the harvest, which could yield dozens of tuna per session in traditional operations.[17] Tools such as long spears and hooks facilitate the manual hauling, emphasizing the labor-intensive and physically demanding nature of the method, which has remained largely unchanged for centuries despite its origins tracing back to ancient Phoenician or Carthaginian practices adapted in Sicily.[1] The rais's role extends beyond logistics to include ritualistic elements, such as leading chants that synchronize the crew and invoke protection, underscoring the cultural significance embedded in the slaughter.[14]Cultural and Social Dimensions
Rituals, Songs, and Community Involvement
The mattanza process incorporates rituals rooted in religious invocations and communal rites, often invoking saints for protection and success. In Sicilian tonnare, fishermen perform prayers and chants prior to the slaughter, seeking safety and a bountiful catch, reflecting a ceremonial emphasis on the human-tuna relationship.[18] In Sardinian examples, such as at Carloforte, the raís leads a ritual call for silence before the final harvest, stating, “May the holy sacrament be thanked. In the name of Saint Anthony, let go,” met with the crew's unified response of “Aoooohh!”[4] These practices underscore the event's quasi-sacred character, blending practical fishing with invocations to mitigate risks in the intense confrontation. Songs, known as cialomi or cialome in Sicily, form an integral rhythmic and social element during the mattanza. Performed antiphonally, a lead singer called the cialumaturi intones verses, with the tunnaroti (fishermen) responding in chorus; examples include religious songs like Aiamola, work-rhythm songs such as Gnanzù, and profane ones like Lina, Lina.[19] Of potential Greek origins via kéleusma (rowing cadences), these chants accompany early phases of hauling nets, ceasing 60 meters before the final chamber to maintain focus amid frenzy.[19] They serve ergological functions, synchronizing labor, alleviating fatigue, and reinforcing group cohesion through shared performance.[20] Community involvement centers on hierarchical structures led by the raís, with dozens of locals—up to 50 in a single tonnara—participating as fishermen, net handlers, and processors.[4] In places like Favignana and Carloforte, the mattanza historically unified villages, with roles passed through families, fostering identity and economic interdependence; songs often mock the raís to ritually reaffirm authority.[19] This collective effort, enacted seasonally for brief intense periods, embedded the practice in local social fabric, blending labor with cultural expression.[5]Symbolic and Economic Role in Local Societies
The mattanza held profound symbolic significance in Sicilian and Sardinian coastal societies, embodying a ritualistic bond between humans and the sea that transcended mere subsistence fishing. Often described as a "bloody act of tragic beauty," the process involved ceremonial prayers to saints for safety and abundance, accompanied by work songs chanted by fishermen under the direction of the rais, the expedition leader, during the hoisting of nets.[5][18] These rituals, potentially tracing back to prehistoric practices, reinforced community cohesion as entire villages participated or observed the collective hunt, viewing it as a sacred harvest that demanded respect for the sea's provisioning role.[5][12] In local lore, the mattanza symbolized the cyclical triumph over nature's forces, with the slaughter—termed the "chamber of death"—serving as a communal rite that highlighted themes of peril, unity, and reverence for marine life.[16] Economically, the tonnara system anchored local livelihoods for centuries, functioning as the primary economic pillar in tuna-dependent coastal enclaves of Sicily and Sardinia. Tuna traps provided seasonal employment for dozens to hundreds of workers per site, including fishermen, net menders, and processors, with operations like the Tonnara di Vendicari once sustaining up to 100 laborers and yielding thousands of tons of preserved tuna annually for trade.[21] In Sardinia's Sulcis region, the fishery ensured food security, generated export revenues through salted and smoked products, and structured community life around annual migrations, as documented in analyses of trap fisheries' socioeconomic impacts.[22][23] Modern remnants, such as one of Italy's last operational tonnare, continue to invest approximately €1.5 million yearly while employing around 50 individuals, underscoring the method's enduring, albeit diminished, role in regional economies despite competition from industrial alternatives.[24] The decline of mattanza has historically disrupted family-based enterprises and trade networks, eroding the economic vitality that once defined these insular societies.[18][12]Economic Contributions
Historical Livelihoods and Trade
The tonnara system, integral to the mattanza process, historically provided essential livelihoods for coastal communities in Sicily, particularly in the Egadi Islands and western shores, where it dominated local economies from the medieval period onward.[25] These fixed-net traps supported seasonal employment for fishermen tasked with maintaining vast underwater net structures, rais (captains) directing the mattanza slaughter, and onshore workers handling processing, salting, and packing.[12] In peak operations, such as the 19th-century Florio tonnara at Favignana, up to 800 individuals were employed annually, encompassing net repairers, boat crews, and laborers in ancillary roles like barrel-making for preservation.[26] [27] Tuna yields from these operations underpinned trade networks, with catches processed into durable forms like salted ventresca (belly cuts), bottarga (roe sacs), and oil-packed fillets for export.[1] In 1853, the Favignana tonnara alone harvested 6,828 bluefin tuna, contributing to Sicily's integration into Mediterranean commerce.[27] During the 18th and 19th centuries, preserved tuna exports expanded to mainland Italy, France, and northern European markets, bolstering Sicily's fishing industry value, which by the late 20th century reached hundreds of millions in equivalent modern terms but traced roots to these historical volumes.[28] [29] This trade not only generated income through direct sales but also stimulated related sectors, including shipping and cooperage, fostering economic resilience in otherwise agrarian regions.[22] The distribution of proceeds from tonnara yields reinforced social hierarchies, with shares allocated to investors (tonnaroti), skilled participants, and communal funds, ensuring broad community benefits despite the labor-intensive and hazardous nature of the work.[13] By the 19th century, industrial advancements under families like the Florios transformed tonnare into proto-factories, enhancing efficiency and market reach while sustaining thousands of jobs amid fluctuating migrations.[26] This economic model persisted until overexploitation and regulatory shifts in the late 20th century eroded its viability, but historically, it exemplified sustainable, trap-based fishing's role in regional prosperity.[10]Impacts of Decline on Regional Economies
The decline of the mattanza and associated tonnara systems has resulted in significant job losses in traditional tuna fishing communities across Sicily and Sardinia, where these fisheries once provided seasonal and permanent employment for hundreds per site. In Favignana, Sicily, the tonnara employed nearly the entire island's residents as a company town until its closure, with historical peaks of around 800 workers in the 19th century during peak operations; post-closure in 2007, direct fishing and processing roles evaporated, forcing economic pivots to tourism.[27][30][12] Similarly, in Sardinia, the tuna-trap sector historically supported over 1,000 workers by the mid-20th century, but closures like Porto Paglia in 1977 due to dwindling catches and labor shortages led to strikes and widespread unemployment in southwest coastal areas.[14][23] EU-imposed quotas, intended to address bluefin tuna overexploitation primarily from industrial purse-seine fleets, disproportionately burdened small-scale tonnara operators unable to compete for allocations favoring larger vessels, precipitating bankruptcies and further job shedding.[31] In Sardinia's Carloforte, for instance, 2011 quotas limited to 82.2 tons restricted operations to two of three traps, threatening the viability of 44 direct fishermen and 100 indirect jobs in transport and maintenance, while premium markets like Japan offered insufficient volume to sustain locals.[4][23] This has eroded family-based livelihoods, with many transitioning to precarious seasonal tourism roles, though data indicate tourism's growth in places like Favignana has not fully offset losses, as it demands different skills and yields inconsistent income amid broader Sicilian fisheries employing 26% of Italy's seamen yet facing sector-wide contraction.[32][18] Broader regional effects include disrupted supply chains for processed tuna products, such as bottarga and ventresca, which commanded retail prices up to 16 €/kg, and cultural-economic spillovers like diminished festivals tied to mattanza that once boosted local commerce.[23] In areas like Sulcis, Sardinia, 1970s closures exacerbated by pollution halved tuna yields, accelerating out-migration and stunting diversification, while Sicily's coastal economies grapple with persistent underemployment despite tourism influxes.[22] These shifts highlight causal links between regulatory frameworks prioritizing stock recovery over traditional methods—despite evidence of tonnara's lower bycatch—and localized economic contraction, with recovery hinging on quota reforms or heritage tourism integration.[33]Environmental Dynamics and Sustainability
Tuna Migration Patterns and Stock Fluctuations
Atlantic bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) of the eastern stock undertake annual migrations from the Atlantic Ocean into the Mediterranean Sea, entering primarily through the Strait of Gibraltar between March and June to access spawning grounds.[34] These fish, often forming large schools, follow predictable routes along the western Mediterranean shelf, including areas off North Africa and southern Europe, driven by oceanographic features such as currents and temperature gradients that facilitate energy-efficient travel and foraging.[35] Spawning occurs mainly in the central and eastern Mediterranean from May to July, with peak activity in waters warmer than 20°C, after which adults exhibit post-spawning migrations westward toward the Gibraltar Strait or northward to summer feeding grounds in cooler Atlantic waters.[36] Electronic tagging studies confirm high site fidelity to these routes, with individuals returning to similar Mediterranean entry points year after year, a behavior that historically enabled fixed trap systems like tonnare to intercept schools reliably during the spring influx.[37] Stock abundance for the eastern Atlantic and Mediterranean population has fluctuated dramatically over the past century, influenced by fishing pressure, environmental variability, and management interventions. Historical catches peaked at around 60,000 metric tons annually in the 1960s and 1970s, supported by expanding industrial purse-seine fleets, but biomass declined sharply thereafter due to sustained overexploitation exceeding recruitment rates.[38] By the early 2000s, spawning stock biomass had fallen to critically low levels—estimated at less than 20% of unexploited levels in some assessments—amid illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing that inflated reported harvests to 50,000–61,000 tons in the 1990s despite biological warning signs.[10] The International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT) initiated recovery measures in 2006, including total allowable catch (TAC) reductions from 29,500 tons in 2007 to 12,195 tons by 2018, alongside enforcement against IUU activities, which peer-reviewed stock assessments attribute to a subsequent rebound.[39] Recent ICCAT evaluations, such as the 2022 assessment, indicate substantial stock rebuilding, with spawning biomass exceeding maximum sustainable yield levels and recruitment stabilizing at historical averages, rendering the stock no longer overfished as of 2020.[40] [41] However, fluctuations persist due to environmental factors like shifting sea surface temperatures affecting larval survival and migration timing, as evidenced by variable trap yields in traditional fisheries during El Niño-influenced years.[42] These dynamics underscore the vulnerability of long-lived, late-maturing species like bluefin tuna to serial overharvest, with recovery dependent on sustained quotas rather than natural resilience alone.[43]Comparative Sustainability of Traditional vs. Industrial Methods
The traditional mattanza method, employing fixed labyrinthine traps known as tonnare, exhibits lower environmental impacts compared to industrial tuna fishing techniques such as purse seining and longlining, primarily due to its selectivity and minimal operational footprint. These traps passively capture migrating adult bluefin tuna (Thunnus thynnus) during seasonal spawning runs in the Mediterranean, allowing non-target species to escape through deliberate design, resulting in near-zero bycatch rates for marine mammals, sharks, and seabirds.[3] In contrast, industrial purse seine operations, which account for approximately 66% of global tuna catch, frequently deploy fish aggregating devices (FADs) that entangle unintended species, yielding bycatch rates of 5-20% of total catch, including vulnerable sharks, rays, and turtles.[44][45] This selectivity in traditional methods preserves local biodiversity, as fisheries experts note the tonnara's capacity to release endangered species unharmed, a feature absent in high-seas industrial fleets that contribute to broader ecosystem disruption.[4] Fuel efficiency further favors traditional approaches, with trap-based fishing requiring negligible motorized pursuit, relying instead on fixed structures and manual harvesting, akin to low-consumption artisanal fleets at roughly 0.07 kg fuel per kg of fish landed. Industrial purse seiners, by comparison, consume 368-543 liters of fuel per tonne of live weight catch, driven by high-speed vessel operations and FAD deployment across vast ocean expanses, exacerbating carbon emissions and contributing to an estimated 2.5 million tonnes of annual fuel use by global tuna fleets in 2009.[46][47][48] The passive nature of mattanza minimizes habitat disturbance, avoiding the seabed scarring from industrial gear like bottom trawls or the ghost fishing from lost FADs, which persist as marine debris.[49] Regarding stock sustainability, traditional mattanza's limited scale—confined to coastal Sicilian and Sardinian sites with historical yields under quotas—exerts far less pressure on bluefin populations than industrial overcapacity, which has driven Atlantic stocks to historic lows through unchecked harvesting in the late 1990s and 2000s. Overfishing stems predominantly from large-scale fleets targeting high-value sashimi markets, reducing biomass to 2% of unfished levels in some Pacific stocks by the 2000s, whereas tonnara's ritualistic, quota-bound harvests align with natural migration cycles without accelerating depletion.[50][51] Empirical assessments affirm tonnara as ecologically viable when regulated, contrasting with industrial methods' role in systemic overexploitation despite international quotas.[4][52]| Aspect | Traditional Mattanza/Tonnara | Industrial Methods (e.g., Purse Seine) |
|---|---|---|
| Bycatch Rate | Near zero; selective for adult tuna[3] | 5-20%; includes sharks, turtles, rays[45][53] |
| Fuel Use (per tonne) | Low (~70 L equivalent, artisanal benchmark)[46] | 368-543 L; high due to pursuit and gear[47][48] |
| Stock Impact | Minimal; local, seasonal[4] | High; drives overfishing[50][52] |