TINY WHALE SHARK GIVES CLUES TO SEA GIANT´S BEHAVIOUR


Environmental Panorama
International
March of 2009


09 Mar 2009 - The shock discovery in the Philippines of a tiny whale shark – possibly the smallest of its kind ever recorded – has given scientists new insight into the breeding behavior of these mysterious fish.

Scientists from WWF-Philippines, working with local police and government officials, freed a 38 cm whale shark over the weekend captured by a fisherman in the Philippines province of Sorsogon, near the coastal town of Donsol, a hub where whale sharks congregate.

The rescued shark was the smallest whale shark ever recorded in the Philippines, and possibly the smallest ever found in the world.

The whale shark is the world’s largest living fish, measuring up to more than 12 meters and weighing up to almost 14 tons, making the weekend encounter by scientists with the miniscule captive whale shark a unique opportunity to learn more about the huge fish species.

Despite all the ongoing research on whale sharks, little is known about where they breed or give birth.

Because of its small size, the whale shark found in the Sorsogon Province was likely born near the area. This indicates that the Philippines – at the apex of the Coral Triangle – likely is one of the places where these giants of the sea are born, according to WWF-Philippines.

For many years, scientists thought that the Sorsogon coastline was merely one of many stops along the global network of marine highways traveled by whale sharks. The recent discovery of the small whale shark could change that long-held belief and instead establish the coastline as a birthing area for the sharks.

After being tipped off that a whale shark had been caught to be sold, researchers from WWF-Philippines alerted local authorities and together they located and freed the shark, which the fisherman had restrained with a rope tied around its tail.

The rescuers then checked to make sure the shark had not been injured, and documented and measured it, before transferring it into a large, water-filled plastic bag to allow it to swim freely prior to its release. They eventually took the shark out to deeper water, where it was less likely to get entangled in a fish net, and set it free.

Although listed under Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), a status which strictly regulates the trade of the species based on quotas and permits to prevent their unsustainable use, whale sharks continue to be harvested for a variety of products, including their liver oil and fins.

The waters around Donsol are part of the Sulu-Sulawesi Seas ecoregion, one of WWF's Global 200 ecoregions — a science-based global ranking of the world's most biologically outstanding habitats and the regions on which WWF concentrates its efforts. The also make up part of the Coral Triangle, a major area of marine biodiversity.

Leaders of the six nations that make up the Coral Triangle – Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and Timor Leste –will meet on May 15 in Manado, Indonesia for the World Oceans Conference where they will announce a comprehensive set of actions to protect ecosystems and food security in the region.

+ More

Endangered groupers to stay off dining plates under Philippines deal

06 Mar 2009 Filipino fishermen and fish traders have signed off on a plan to save grouper stocks in the Coral Triangle by keeping more than a million kilos of the endangered fish off restaurant dinner plates annually across Asia.

The grouper is Asia’s most in-demand reef fish and considered a delicacy with high-end diners in places such as Hong Kong and Singapore.

But decades of highly unregulated cyanide and dynamite fishing, and a rising trend of targeting vulnerable spawning areas to feed the live reef fish trade, are threatening wild grouper stocks in the Philippines province of Palawan with total collapse.

The IUCN recently assessed all 161 species of grouper and categorized twenty grouper species as threatened with extinction, including the squaretail coral grouper and humpback grouper, which are found throughout the Coral Triangle and are a popular luxury live food in Asian seafood restaurants.

To help avoid the total collapse of grouper stocks near the Philippines island of Palawan, the Palawan Council for Sustainable Development, the Palawan Provincial Government and WWF staged a sustainable live reef fish summit in Palawan last month to help locals develop their own solutions – including practical accreditation processes, quotas, levies, surveillance and monitoring systems.

Palawan and its territorial waters host some of the most productive yet exploited fishing grounds in the Coral Triangle – the world's centre for marine biodiversity. Groupers make up a large part of the Coral Triangle’s live fish trade.

At the summit held at Palawan’s State University, fishermen and traders pledged to reduce Palawan's annual grouper haul by more than 25 percent. They agreed to reduce the annual catch of 700 metric tons to 516 metric tons – keeping roughly 1.5 million kilograms of Coral Triangle grouper in the ocean every year.

Beginning in the 1970s, exports of live grouper, snapper and wrasse from the region have made their way to the kitchens and live fish tanks across Asia – particularly Hong Kong, Singapore and mainland China.

The Philippines is the biggest supplier of the most high value live reef fish, coral trout, to those Asian seafood hubs, and the province of Palawan supplies around 60 per cent of all Philippines fish. The highly unregulated live reef fish business is estimated to bring in more than $US100 million dollars annually to fishing communities on the island, making the recent agreement that much more of a watershed moment in conservation.

“The annual grouper yield is immense – last year local fishermen reeled in over 700 metric tones. Unfortunately we’ve estimated the sustainable yield to be no more than 140 metric tonnes – meaning the yearly take is five times more than what can be harvested,” said Dr. Geoffrey Muldoon, Live Reef Fish Strategy Leader for WWF’s Coral Triangle Program.

Fishermen and fish traders made the agreement during the Live Reef Fish Summit held at Palawan State University on 23 Feb. The summit was organized by the PCSD, Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR), the Palawan Provincial Government and WWF to unify local government units, fishermen and traders in discussing sustainable management practices for their fishing trade.

“Local communities are delivery systems for conservation. The stakeholders of Palawan have created a watershed moment. The agreements arrived at today have been based on a recognition of the realities of overfishing, human footprint and climate change. In a sense, this is true transformation,” WWF Vice-Chairman and CEO Lory Tan said.

The decision comes as leaders of the six nations that make up the Coral Triangle – Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and Timor Leste – prepare to gather in Manado, Indonesia in May for the World Oceans Conference where they will announce a comprehensive set of actions to protect ecosystems and food security in the region.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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