In the Yangtze River area, the ban will last for three months, despite some ecologists claiming the annual move - in place since 2002 - had done little to improve the longest river in Asia's ecosystem, or the wildlife in its surrounding areas.
Local authorities have been promoting the ban since late last month, raising awareness among fishermen.
They are ready to send inspection teams to make sure the ban, which will affect about 140,000 fishermen in 10 cities and provinces along a 120-km section of the river, is strictly carried out.
Contact the writers at qiuquanlin@chinadaily.com.cn and wangzhenghua@ chinadaily.com.cn
HK's new cruise terminal receives luxury liner
Future points to carbon trading
Seafood businesses flounder amid spending cut
Equities slump amid slow-growth estimates
Auto show opens with much fanfare in Xi'an
Sunnylands summit fuels Chinese tourism interest
'Palace on wheels' on sale for $3.13m in Dubai
Fortune smiles on Chengdu as forum concludes