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MEXICO CITY, June 30 (Reuters) - Mexico on Friday banned fishing with gillnets in the northern Gulf of California as part of its pledge to save a critically-endangered species of porpoise whose cause has been championed by Hollywood actor Leonardo DiCaprio and others.

The snub-nosed vaquita porpoise has all but died out due to gillnet fishing for shrimp and totoaba, a delicacy in Asia. Mexico three chăn ga gối hanvico, chan ga goi hanvico, địa chỉ mua chăn ga gối hanvico, dia chi mua chan ga goi hanvico, chăn ga gối hanvico hà nội, chan ga goi hanvico ha noi weeks ago unveiled a plan with DiCaprio to protect the diminutive marine đệm bông ép hanvico,dem bong ep hanvico, mua đệm bông ép hanvico, mua dem bong ep hanvico, đệm bông ép hanvico ở hà nội, dem bong ep hanvico o ha noi, mua đệm bông ép hanvico, mua dem bong ep hanvico hanvico, dem hanvico, hanvico, chăn ga gối đệm lò xo hanvico hà nội hanvico, chan ga gối hanvico, chan ga goi dem hanvico, chan ga goi hanvico mammal.

Gillnets, mua ruot goi hanvico which use mesh sizes designed to allow fish to get only their head through the netting but not their body, are blamed for trapping the vaquita porpoises and killing them.

In its official gazette, the Mexican government said it had issued a permanent ban on fishing with gillnets in the northern Gulf of California, where the few remaining vaquitas live.

DiCaprio's foundation estimated in early June there are now fewer than 30 vaquitas left in the wild.

On his Twitter account, the American actor hailed as "great news" the announcement that a previous temporary ban on the nets had been made permanent, offering his thanks to Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto and the World Wildlife Fund.

Pena Nieto retweeted DiCaprio's remarks. (Reporting by Dave Graham and Noe Torres; Editing by Nick Macfie)