GREAT BARRIER REEF MARINE PARK AUTHORITY CHAIRMAN REAPPOINTED

Environmental Panorama
International
October of 2012


Media release - 30 October 2012 - Dr Russell Reichelt has been reappointed as chairman of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority for a second five-year term, Environment Minister Tony Burke announced today.

“I’m really glad Dr Russell Reichelt will continue leading the excellent work being undertaken by the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority,” he said.

“He has a wealth of knowledge of the Great Barrier Reef as both a researcher and marine manager, and is well-regarded in the field of marine science.

“Over the last five years Dr Reichelt has done an exemplary job leading the management of the Great Barrier Reef at a time when it faces a number of challenges.

“The Great Barrier Reef is an amazing natural treasure, and I’m pleased to continue working with Dr Reichelt to ensure it is protected for the future.”

As Chairman, Dr Reichelt has been involved in a number of major initiatives including the 2009 Great Barrier Reef Outlook Report which provided an overview of the Reef’s health, highlighting it was at a crossroads and more protection was needed.

Under his leadership, the highly successful Reef Guardian stewardship program expanded to include 113,000 students from over 285 schools as well as 14 Councils.

The agency also strengthened its work with Traditional Owners, expanded water quality monitoring, and implemented an extreme weather response program after cyclone Yasi.

Dr Reichelt also supported the concept of a strategic assessment of the Great Barrier Reef region to examine how multiple pressures from multiple activities are affecting the Reef. It follows the World Heritage Committee expressing concern about the impact of coastal development along the Queensland coast on the marine environment.

He has a strong interest in the Great Barrier Reef – he’s been diving on the Reef since 1968 and graduated with honours in science from the University of Queensland in 1974.

During the 1980s he worked as a research scientist at the Australian Institute of Marine Science studying coral reef ecology, particularly the crown-of-thorns starfish. He has a PhD in marine science and was CEO of the Australian Institute of Marine Science for five years.

Dr Reichelt has been a board member for a number of environmental and marine management organisations, and chaired environmental advisory committees. He is an Adjunct Professor at James Cook University and the University of Queensland.

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Giant manta ray to receive protection

Media release - 20 October 2012 - Environment Minister Tony Burke has announced that a majestic giant of the sea, the giant manta ray, is now protected under national environment law.

The giant manta ray – which has a wingspan of up to 6.5 metres and can weigh up to 1400kg - is now listed as a Migratory Species under Australia's Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act.

Mr Burke said while giant manta ray populations are believed to be fairly secure in Australia, they have declined by more than 30 per cent internationally.

"The giant manta ray is a highly migratory species - with some being known to travel more than 1000 kilometres - and threats often arise outside of protected areas," Mr Burke said.

"For this reason, the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species and our national environment law are an excellent way to achieve international cooperation and coordination to better protect the species.

"The major threat to manta rays internationally is overexploitation. The species has a high value in international trade, and fisheries exist overseas that target it at unsustainable levels. The species can also end up as by-catch.

"However, the giant manta ray is not targeted commercially or recreationally here, and is rarely reported as by-catch in Australian waters."

Mr Burke said the listing ensures that it is now an offence to take, trade, keep, or move the species in Commonwealth waters.

"If a commercial or recreational fisher interacts with a giant manta ray in Commonwealth waters, they will be required to report the incident, as is currently the case with all protected species listed under the Act such as dugongs, whale sharks and a number of species of whales and turtles," he said.

The giant manta ray is found in tropical, sub-tropical and temperate waters of the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans, and is common in tropical waters of Australia.

The protection measure follows the giant manta ray's inclusion as a threatened migratory species on an appendix of the international multilateral environment agreement, the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species.

The Convention seeks to conserve terrestrial, avian and marine species that migrate across or outside national jurisdictional boundaries. Parties to the Convention must protect migratory species listed on its appendices that live within, or pass through, their jurisdiction.

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

 

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