SEABIRDS NOW INTERNATIONALLY PROTECTED
ACROSS AFRICA AND EURASIA


Environmental Panorama
International
October of 2008


Bonn, 2 October 2008 - The decision to give 20 waterbird species - traditionally considered as seabirds - greater international protection was made at the Fourth Meeting of the Parties to AEWA (MOP4) which was held in Antananarivo, Madagascar from 15-19 September 2008.

At the meeting over 150 delegates from 80 countries adopted, among others Resolution 4.11, which calls for the inclusion of 20 additional waterbird species in Annex 2 of the Agreement (AEWA Annex 2: Waterbird Species to which the Agreement Applies). The inclusion of these species gives them greater international protection and calls upon countries and other stakeholders in the region to take concrete action for those species that have an unfavourable conservation status.

Most seabird populations are highly threatened. Amongst the most significant threats are food shortages due to depletion of fish stocks, to which overfishing and climate change both contribute. By-catch in long-line fisheries, oil pollution and solid waste (debris) are other problems for seabirds. Further threats are destruction of habitats and unsustainable human exploitation. On-land threats include disturbances at breeding sites and introduced terrestrial predators.

Bert Lenten, the Executive Secretary of AEWA said: "I am very satisfied with the decision of the 4th Meeting of the Parties to include 20 seabird species in AEWA. This means that more attention will be paid to the conservation of these species. Some of them, such as the tropic birds need urgent attention because their populations are numbering less than 10,000 individuals."

At the request of the Meeting of Parties the AEWA Technical Committee, the international scientific advisory body of the Agreement, reviewed existing provisions and regulations related to seabirds in international law. The outcome of this review is that although a number of provisions and regulations exist, the threats seabirds are facing are insufficiently covered by other Multilateral Environmental Agreements in the African-Eurasian region. The inclusion of these migratory seabird species in the AEWA species list will help fill this gap and provides the basis for greater international efforts to conserve these waterbird species, traditionally regarded as seabirds.

Notes for Editors:
The 20 new seabird species that have been included in Annex 2 of AEWA are:
Species Name / English Name
Phaethon aetheras / Red-billed Tropicbird
Phaethon rubricauda / Red-tailed Tropicbird
Phaethon lepturus / White-tailed Tropicbird
Sula (Morus) bassana / Northern Gannet
Sula dactylatra / Masked Booby
Fregata minor / Great Frigatebird
Fregata ariel / Lesser Frigatebird
Catharacta skua / Great Skua
Stercorarius longicaudus / Long-tailed Skua
Rissa tridactyla / Black-legged Kittiwake
Sterna anaethetus / Bridled Tern
Sterna fuscata / Sooty Tern
Anous stolidus / Brown Noddy
Anous tenuirostris / Lesser Noddy
Alle alle / Little Auk
Uria aalge / Common Guillemot
Uria lomvia / Brunnich’s Guillemot
Alca torda / Razorbill
Cepphus grylle / Black Guillemot
Fratercula arctica / Atlantic Puffin
AEWA Resolution 4.11, the full Technical Committee Seabird Report and other information related to seabirds please see:
www.unep-aewa.org/press
AEWA – The African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbird Agreement, or AEWA is a United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) backed treaty dedicated to the protection of 255 species of waterbirds which migrate along the African-Eurasian Flyways. AEWA provides the framework for countries in the region to work together to conserve such species as ducks, waders, storks, flamingos and many other migratory waterbirds. Countries that have become Parties to the Agreement commit themselves to putting measures in place to conserve the region's waterbird populations and the habitats on which they depend. Currently 62 Parties out of 118 Range States in Africa and Eurasia have joined AEWA.
For more information on AEWA please see: www.unep-aewa.org
MOP4 in Madagascar – Madagascar was host country to the Fourth Meeting of the Parties to AEWA (MOP4), which was jointly organized by the UNEP/AEWA Secretariat and the Madagascan Ministry of the Environment, Forestry and Tourism (MEFT). At the meeting a total of 20 resolutions were adopted and delegates reviewed the implementation of the Agreement and Action Plan and addressed a number of issues relating to the conservation of migratory waterbirds. The theme of MOP4 was “Flyway conservation at work – Review of the past, vision for the future”.
Mr. Florian Keil, Information Officer, UNEP/AEWA Secretariat

 
 

Source: United Nations Environment Programme
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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