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The image depicts pie charts and a table that illustrate the total value and sources of fish imported to the United States between 1988 and 2000. The table shows the total value in billions of dollars, with 1988 having 6.57, 1992 having 8.52, and 2000 having 10.72. The pie charts show the sources of fish imported to the US, with China, Canada, and others as the categories. In 1988, China had 13%, Canada had 27%, and others had 60%. In 1992, China had 20%, Canada had 34%, and others had 46%. In 2000, China had 30%, Canada had 28%, and others had 42%.
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The two diagrams illustrate the total value and sources of fish imported to the US between 1988 and 2000. Overall, it is clear that all sources showed an upward trend in total value, while the fish imported from various countries displayed fluctuations with rises and declines.
A detailed look at 1988 shows that Canada supplied the largest proportion of fish to the US, accounting for 60%, which was more than twice the amount supplied by other countries. China had the smallest share at 13%. Over the following years, the proportion of fish imported from Canada gradually decreased to 28% in 2000 while fish from other countries peaked at 46% in 1992 despite a slight 4% decrease.
Looking at the table, the total value of the fish industry in the US was 6.57 billion dollars in 1998. The value increased significantly to 8.52 billion in 1992 and then to 10.72 billion in 2000
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