PUTIN PUTS WRITING ON ‘WALLS OF DEATH’ IN RUSSIA


Environmental Panorama
International
February of 2009


17 Feb 2009 - Moscow, Russia - Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has proposed outlawing fishing with drift nets, otherwise known as “walls of death”, following a lengthy campaign by fishermen and politicians in Kamchatka as well as local organizations including WWF-Russia.

Drift nets are used to catch fish migrating in open sea. Each net can be several kilometres long and their use results in a large bycatch of sharks, turtles, seabirds and marine mammals which are usually thrown back dead into the ocean.

Large-scale ocean drift netting was banned by the UN in international waters in 2002 and near-shore drift netting is carefully regulated in US and EU waters. In the Russian Far East two kinds of ocean drift net fishing exist: Japanese, in accordance with the bilateral agreement with Russia, and the so-called “scientific” drift netting. Both are principally aimed at the highly prized sockeye salmon and it is estimated that 60,000 tons of other less valuable salmon are discarded annually.

Over the past three months WWF-Russia, together with the Kamchatka coalition “Save the Salmon Together”, has collected signatures in support of a ban on drift net fishing. The coalition, supported by WWF, unites local NGOs, fishermen and representatives of the Kamchatka legislative and executive authorities.

The Kamchatka coastal fishermen, including indigenous people, have been fighting for several years for a ban on drift net fishing. Now, according to the press service of the Kamchatka Parliament (Duma), Prime Minister Putin has given orders for documents to be prepared on the complete ban of drift nets in Russian waters.

“We welcome this proposal because we consider ocean drift netting to be environmentally dangerous and there are better ways of catching fish,” said Konstantin Zgurovsky, Head of WWF-Russia Marine Programme.

It is not for nothing that drift nets are called walls of death. Pacific salmon and marine mammals including whales, dolphins, seabirds and even threatened species such as the Short-tailed Albatross get caught in the nets.

Another consequence of drift net fishing is that the nets become a barrier for fish on their way from the ocean to the rivers to spawn, thus depriving local fishermen of their potential catch.

“This month in Kamchatka there will be a public hearing on the drift net ban and there are some commercial interests of people who want to continue using the drift net, so the struggle is not over,” said Zgurovsky.

+ More

Traditional leaders to help WWF save threatened marine turtles

23 Feb 2009 - WWF will convene a council of traditional leaders in the Asia Pacific’s Coral Triangle to help reverse the decline of globally threatened marine turtles, an international symposium on sea turtle biology and conservation held in Brisbane, Australia heard this week.

The Coral Triangle spans Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands and Timor Leste and is home to six of the seven known species of marine turtles, including green, hawksbill, loggerhead, flatback, olive ridley, and leatherback turtles.

The protection of critical turtle nesting beaches and foraging grounds in the Coral Triangle is compromised by the remoteness of their locations, which resulted in the plan to engage local community leaders in a Turtle Guardian Council to help protect the sites.

“The idea behind the Turtle Guardian Council was to support more effective management by traditional leaders of critical turtle habitats, especially in remote areas, where there is limited formal government capacity and resources to implement turtle conservation,” said Dr Matheus Halim, Turtle Strategy Leader for WWF’s Coral Triangle Programme.

“What we need to achieve now is formal and legal government recognition within this part of the world of the important role traditional leaders play in protection of sea turtles.”

The Indonesian Government has developed a draft National Action Plan that acknowledges the role of communities in the protection of turtle nesting beaches. The local communities in Jamursbamedi and Warmon in Papua – two of the remaining leatherback turtle nesting areas in the Western Pacific – are good examples of community involvement in surveillance and scientific work where government intervention is very limited.

All of the Coral Triangle’s turtle species are threatened with extinction through over-exploitation for their meat, consumption of their eggs, and through the illegal trade in shells for ornamental purposes.

In addition to the threats marine turtles face on land, hundreds of thousands of turtles are killed each year as unwanted bycatch in fishing gear such as longlines and nets.

As many as 200,000 loggerheads and 50,000 leatherbacks are caught annually by commercial long-line tuna, swordfish, and similar fisheries all over the world. Just in the Pacific, the leatherback turtle population has dropped from 90,000 nesting females in the 1980s to approximately 2,000 today.

“Turtle conservation in the Coral Triangle has so far been tackled by each country under their own national laws. However, this backyard-oriented, fragmented method has never been sufficient in dealing with issues of a transboundary nature,” said Dr Halim.

“Because turtles belong to no particular country, protecting them requires a more cohesive and integrated approach.”

The strong biological ties between Indonesia and the reefs on the west Australian coast have recently been demonstrated with the tagging of green turtles in Indonesia and the monitoring of their progress to the Kimberley-Pilbara coast in west Australia.

In February and November last year, Dorte and Ana, two female green turtles, were tagged in Indonesia as part of a turtle tracking project by WWF and Udayana University in Bali. Their progress was monitored as they slowly made their way from nesting beaches in East Java, across the Indian Ocean, to the beaches of the Kimberley in Western Australia.

A transboundary turtle conservation initiative has been established between Indonesia, Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, three countries with a shared interest in Western Pacific leatherback turtle conservation. An agreement to share the responsibilities of protecting the migratory path of the Western Pacific leatherback has lead the three countries to establish network of marine protected areas.

“Remarkably, despite the range of threats these species face, many populations of marine turtles in the region can recover with adequate intervention,” Dr Halim said.

“The tracking of turtles such as Ana and Dorte have shown us areas where we need to focus our efforts, and is helping us understand, for example, how we could design networks of marine protected areas that conserve the full range of plant and animal life, and ensure their survival for years to come.”

Charlie Stevens, Media Manager, WWF Coral Triangle Programme
Dr Matheus Halim, Turtle Strategy Leader, WWF Coral Triangle Programme

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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