CAMBODIAN FISHERMEN CHARGED WITH KILLING RARE RIVER DOLPHIN

Environmental Panorama
Srepok - Cambodia
February of 2005

 

25/02/2005– Park rangers in Cambodia’s Srepok Wilderness area apprehended four fishermen suspected of killing a critically endangered Irrawaddy dolphin. The four fishermen were caught using the destructive practice of dynamite fishing in the Srepok River, which inadvertently killed the dolphin.

WWF-Cambodia, has been working closely with the Cambodian Forestry Administration to manage and protect the 370,000ha Srepok Wilderness Area, is advocating that the fishermen are prosecuted for the dolphin killing.

“I’m proud that rangers were able to play a part in catching these suspects,” said Teak Seng, WWF-Cambodia’s country director. “The court action against the four is an example of Cambodia’s strong commitment to wildlife protection.”

The Srepok Wilderness Area in eastern Cambodia is home to many endangered fish species, mammals and birds. Ironically, the death of the dolphin is the first evidence that the rare species survives in Srepok River, from which the Irrawaddy was thought to have disappeared more than a decade ago.

The Irrawaddy dolphin (Orcaella brevirostris) recently received protection under the United Nations Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), so that they can no longer be removed from the wild for sale to aquariums and dolphin shows.

“Their survival continues to be threatened by high rates of death from drowning in fishing nets, not only in Cambodia, but everywhere they are found, from Australia to India to the Philippines,” Seng added

There is no recent global population estimate for Irrawaddy dolphins, but there has been a decline across their range and are likely to number fewer than 1,000 in Southeast Asia.

WWF and the Cambodian government are working together to address the key threats in the Srepok landscape through strengthened protected area management, integrated landscape planning, and improved community livelihoods, including ecotourism development.

Notes:
• Fisheries bycatch is one of the greatest and most pervasive threats to the marine environment. Some 300,000 small whales, dolphins, and porpoises die each year as a result of becoming entangled in fishing gear, and more than 250,000 loggerhead and leatherback marine turtles are caught annually by commercial longline fisheries.

• WWF estimates that six cetacean species may disappear in the next decade because of fishing gear entanglement. There are probably fewer than 100 Maui's dolphins left in New Zealand because of high entanglement rates in set nets and by pair trawlers. Similar threats have dramatically reduced populations of the Vaquita dolphin in the Gulf of California, the Harbour porpoise in the Baltic Sea, and the Irrawaddy dolphin in the Philippines.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
Press consultantship (Seng Teak)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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