ANTARCTIC WHALE RESEARCH EXPEDITION LAUNCHED


Environmental Panorama
International
January of 2010


Media release
29 January 2010
Australian Minister for the Environment, Peter Garrett, and New Zealand Minister for Research Science and Technology, Wayne Mapp, launched the first Antarctic Whale Research Expedition as part of the Southern Ocean Research Partnership in Wellington today.

“This expedition – the largest of its kind in the world - demonstrates the Government's position that non-lethal whale research can provide all the information needed to understand and conserve whales,” Mr Garrett said.

“A program of this scale not been seen before. It marries rigorous science and serious environmental inquiry, with an emphasis on collaboration, and respect for the oceans and the creatures that make their home in the vast waters of our planet,” Mr Garrett said.

The inaugural Antarctic Whale Expedition will undertake six weeks of research aboard the New Zealand vessel RV Tangaroa in the Antarctic waters to the south of Australia and New Zealand. The expedition will use state-of-the-art, non-lethal research techniques such as biopsy sampling, satellite tracking and acoustic and hydrographic surveys.

The research, jointly undertaken by Australia, New Zealand and French scientists aboard the RV Tangaroa, will improve the understanding of the population structure, abundance, trends, distribution, and ecological role of whales in the Southern Ocean.

“The Southern Ocean Research Partnership is the first truly international, multidisciplinary research collaboration with a focus on improving the conservation of whales,” Mr Garrett said.

“The Partnership is a key International Whaling Commission (IWC) non-lethal research initiative and this voyage will be its most significant activity yet.

“Australia and New Zealand have assembled scientists who are international leaders in their fields to conduct this work. Dr Nick Gales will lead the scientific aspects of the work with his colleagues from Australia, New Zealand and France.

“Their research projects have been deliberately developed to address the most pressing conservation science issues for whales in this region, for example, informing our understanding of why some species, such as Antarctic blue whales, remain such a rare animal in the Southern Ocean. They will also address key issues associated with climate change, such as how whales utilise their vulnerable sea-ice habitats.

“The preliminary results of the expedition will be presented at the IWC annual meeting in Morocco in June 2010,” Mr Garrett said.

+ More

Legislative changes for rec fishing of makos

Media release - 25 January 2010 - Environment Minister, Peter Garrett, said today the Government would move to introduce legislative amendments to ensure that international changes to the status of mako sharks would not affect recreational fishing activities in Australia.

Mr Garrett said it was a requirement of the national environment law, the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act, enacted by the previous government, that species listed internationally under the Convention on Migratory Species (CMS) were automatically included on Australia’s national list of migratory species.

However, with a lack of evidence suggesting that Australian populations of these shark species face the same threats as other parts of the world, or a demonstrable conservation benefit, the Government has decided to act.

“Australia takes its international obligations seriously, however we also believe that our own legislation should provide the flexibility to properly take into account our particular domestic circumstances.

“Unfortunately the national environment law, as written by the previous government, does not allow the Government that flexibility.

“That’s why the Government will ensure that recreational fishers, including charter boat operations, are not unfairly impacted by this international decision, which was driven primarily by concern about northern hemisphere populations of these sharks.

“Importantly, the inflexibility of the EPBC Act when it comes to the listing of species under the international convention was identified as an issue needing correction by the Government’s recently completed independent review of the legislation.

“While the Government will be responding in full to the recommendations of that review, because the new listing will impact disproportionately on recreational fishers for no demonstrable conservation benefit, we think it is important that we act separately on this matter to minimise the impacts on recreational fishers.

“A number of Government MPs, including Member for Corangamite Darren Cheeseman and the Member for Braddon, Sid Sidebottom, have been promoting the need for a practical solution to this issue within Government, and I’m pleased to say we will deliver that.”
Mr Garrett said while a the listing of the three shark species would still have to take effect on 29 January 2010 the Government will act as a priority, upon the resumption of the Parliament.

In the interim the Government has already announced that catch and release fishing of these species is not expected to have a significant impact on populations and therefore is unlikely to be subject to enforcement action.

Minister Garrett has also directed his department to work with fishery managers to improve data on mako and porbeagle sharks in Australian waters, to provide a more comprehensive information base on these shark species for the future.

 
 

Source: Australian - Department of the Environment and Heritage
Australian Alps National Park
Australian Antarctic Division
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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