naturedish socociety for conservation travelled to bangladesh to find out who is really paying the price for our new standard of tropical prawns. the region in southwest bangladesh is the country's leading producer of pprawns for export. it is at the center of f a struggle, pittingng thousands of impoverished people who are fighting to conserve the natural reresources and livelihood agait the might o of the prawn indust. a fafarmer by p profession, like countless o oers, she l lost her familyly's land to shrimpp farm. flooded with salt water to aggressive shrhrimp farmers, families once fefertile land lis under a pond. she e is not alone. >> [speaking foforeign language] >> it is not just the communities where they are cultivated that it is ththreatened. the rivers of this regioion flow a placeorest, proroviding for riviver dolphins and crocodile, and a local resource for the community. most shrhrimp farms in bangladeh stuff themselves, caught i ithe rivevers using very fine and ne. for every share of cox, a an average of 50 juvenile fish will die. this practice isis deciimating e marine