ANTARCTIC WHALING BAN CRUCIAL FOR SOUTHERN HEMISPHERE WHALES


Environmental Panorama
International
June of 2010


Posted on 18 June 2010
Gland, Switzerland, June 18 (WWF) – Preventing whaling in the Southern Ocean (the seas around Antarctica) is critical to ensuring the recovery of whale populations in the entire southern hemisphere, a new WWF report states.

The report comes ahead of the upcoming 62nd International Whaling Commission (IWC) meeting, where governments will debate a possible resumption of commercial whaling in Antarctic waters.

Save the Whale, Save the Southern Ocean reveals how seriously depleted several Southern Hemisphere great whale populations are, many of which are completely reliant on the Southern Ocean as the only place they feed. If whale populations were again decimated in the Southern Ocean, they may also disappear from the seas around many other countries in Africa, Oceania, the Pacific Islands and Latin America.

Whaling in the Southern Ocean has been banned for decades as a result of rampant commercial hunting in the last Century which brought several great whale species to the brink of extinction. In 1994, the IWC established the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary. However since the global ban on commercial whaling came into effect, Japan has killed 9,409 whales in the Southern Ocean in the name of ‘scientific research’.

Today most great whale species in the Southern Ocean remain severely depleted when compared with pre-whaling levels. More than 200,000 Antarctic blue whales used to live in the Southern Ocean – but 20th Century whaling decimated this population and latest estimates put this population at just around 2,300 animals. 725,000 fin whales were killed in previous commercial whaling operations – with fin whales now listed as endangered. Yet the IWC is proposing to open a commercial hunt for this species in the Southern Ocean.

“If there is one place in the world where whales should be protected, it is the Southern Ocean,” said Wendy Elliot, Species Manager at WWF International. “It should be a fundamental and unquestionable responsibility of IWC governments to eliminate immediately all whaling in these waters,” she said.

Whales in the Southern Ocean still haven’t recovered from industrial hunting in the 20th century but they already face new threats to their existence. Climate change, ship-strikes, the potential for unsustainable commercial fishing that could deplete valuable food sources, entanglement in fishing gear and acoustic and chemical pollution are all emerging dangers to the slow-reproducing group of species.

“We know with all certainty rampant killing of more than a million whales in the Southern Ocean had dramatic repercussions on whale populations in the whole southern hemisphere,” said Rob Nicoll, WWF’s Antarctic and Southern Ocean Initiative Manager. “And new studies are showing that the direct effect on whale populations could have had significant impacts on ecosystem productivity that is intrinsically linked to the carbon cycle and global climate regulation,” he added

Recovering whale populations have significant economic benefits. Whales bring critical tourism revenue to the southern hemisphere. In Latin America alone, whale watching generates an annual $278.1 million, often in remote coastal areas.

As a slow reproducing species whales need a long time to recover from overexploitation. Blue whales, for example, reach sexual maturity between the age of five and 15 years, giving birth every two or three years.

“This meeting provides a crucial opportunity to break the decades of disagreement that have characterised the IWC, and an opportunity to put whale conservation before politics. However giving a green light to whaling in this special place would be a step backwards, not forwards for the IWC,” Wendy Elliott said.

+ More

Listing of precious woods a glimmer of hope for ravaged Madagascar

Posted on 18 June 2010
Antananarivo, Madagascar: More than two years of lobbying by WWF and Malagasy scientists, are expected to see the island’s rosewoods, ebony and other precious woods listed for international trade restrictions, giving some hope for a slowing of the organized illegal logging assault on the threatened species and the forests and protected areas where they are found.

WWF and the Department for Plant Ecology and Biology at the University of Antananarivo (DBEV) were informed this week that a proposal had been submitted to list all Malagasy precious wood species under the Convention on Trade in Endangered Species(CITES) appendix lll. On taking effect in 90 days, it will oblige trees to be certified as legally logged and give the Malagasy government leverage for seeking the support of timber importing nations in the enforcement of its laws.

Around 79 containers of rosewood are believed to have been exported from Madagascar in early June despite the promulgation in March of a decree to eradicate all exploitation and trade in precious wood.

The listing also supports a bid for more stringent CITES Appendix ll listing in 2013, which would support trade bans on Malagasy precious woods if necessary.

“The fact that the Malagasy CITES delegation has submitted this proposal is a first step into the right direction. It shows a will to deal with the uncontrolled export of those much sought-after wood species,” said Tiana Ramahaleo, Conservation Science and Species Programme Coordinator at WWF’s Madagascar and Western Indian Ocean Programme Office.

Illegal logging of precious hardwoods has rapidly and tremendously increased in Madagascar after a political coup in March 2009. The UNESCO world heritage site including Masoala and Marojejy National Parks and the Mananara Biosphere Reserve in the island’s northeast are the main hotspots for illegal logging activities.

The Malagasy precious wood species consists of Dalbergia spp and Diospyros spp and includes varieties of Palissander, Rosewood and Ebony; 43 of the 50 Malagasy rose wood and palissander (Dalbergia) species are listed in the red list of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) with 87% of them being threatened.

Brazilian rosewood, also listed as vulnerable, has benefited from CITES protection since 1992. Indeed, the listing of Brazilian rosewood may have been a actor in shifting illegal logging pressure to Madagascar, although it has escalated dramatically in the political turmoil following the coup.

No Malagasy rose wood, ebony and palissander species are listed in a CITES appendix so far. The newly submitted proposal is a success for WWF’s continuous lobbying in the Malagasy government for over two years and gives hope for an inclusion of precious timber species in Appendix II in 2013.

A listing in CITES Appendix III will allow the government to effectively work with other countries to enforce the existing laws in Madagascar. It will also cover a hole in the Malagasy law concerning the protection of palissander. Certified Permits from the CITES authority will be necessary in the future certifying that each tree was cut legally and is not detrimental to species survival.

“We will benefit from more transparency in the timber trade as we will have more information about wood operators, their operation sites, the amount of wood being shipped and, last but not least, the buyers” says Ramahaleo.

“ This is also a necessary stepping stone for us to push the Malagasy CITES authorities to list precious hard wood species in Appendix II during the next CITES Conference of the Parties in Thailand in 2013.”

WWF Madagascar programme representatives have been doing intensive lobbying within the Malagasy government for almost two years. They have supported a group of 30 plant experts and foresters to provide government officials with a solid scientific base that made a CITES proposal possible.

“WWF MWIOPO will continue doing research on hard woods species to be able to support our partners in the Malagasy CITES delegation” says Ramahaleo.

Malagasy precious hard wood species suffer from selective logging because of their high value in international markets. But with a high number of loggers within Malagasy forest, pressure on other species rise too.

With as much as 90% of the country’s primary forest already lost, continued logging will mean species extinctions beyond rosewood in Madagascar’s unique ecosystems.

Listing under CITES appendix III would not only increase the conservation of rosewood, palissander and ebony species but also help protect threatened ecosystems in general.

“This is a good step forward, however a listing in CITES Annex III does not prevent trade, it only makes it more difficult,” said Conservation Director Nanie Ratsifandrihamanana.

“We call on the Malagasy government to walk the talk and enforce the recent decree to stop illegal logging in and outside protected areas, sanction the delinquent operators and implement the necessary actions to responsibly and sustainably manage the timber chain of custody.

“We call on Chinese consumers to stop buying illegally cut wood from Madagascar and on Chinese authorities to set higher standards on their wood sourcing.“

About WWF
WWF is one of the world's largest and most respected independent conservation organizations, with more than 5 million supporters and a global network active in over 100 countries. WWF's mission is to stop the degradation of the earth's natural environment and to build a future in which humans live in harmony with nature, by conserving the world's biological diversity, ensuring that the use of renewable natural resources is sustainable, and promoting the reduction of pollution and wasteful consumption.
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