Unprotected Species Threatened with Extinction
[Note: Species extinction is even more important than the election date.]
Species that are found no-where else in the world but Spirits and Tom Bowling Bays from Cape Reinga to North Cape are likely to be lost irretrievably unless they are fully protected now, says Cath Wallace for the Environment and Conservation Organisations of NZ, ECO.
In response to the Fisheries Minister, John Luxton’s
announcement of a no-fishing strip largely between 50 and 70
metres depth off the Bays, Cath Wallace warned that the
Minister’s minimalist approach to protection is likely to
lead to significant further losses of species and unique
marine commu
nities because of trawling and scallop
dredging.
"The Minister’s response is tragically
inadequate. He is sacrificing rare, very rare, and unique
species. Forty-five are found nowhere else. Losses will be
irretrievable. He appears to have set the 50 m depth inshore
boundary under pressure from the scallop dredgers and
trawlers. There are many s
pecies that will be lost from
the shore side of 50 metres.
"From an ecological point of
view it is essential to protect species in shoreward of the
50 m depth contour because different species and communities
live in shallow water compared to those found beyond 50m.
The fifty metre depth limit has been picked because most
scallop dredges operate in shall
ower waters. The
Minister has also only closed one of the three trawl tracks
that are probably doing a lot of damage – even his own
report concedes this."
Ms Wallace condemned the fishing
companies who pressured the Minister not to give greater
protection to this area. "What we have here are companies
and the SeaFood Industry Council that could be pushing for
proper protection – but they aren’t doing it and instead
fishers are resisting these essen
tial protection
regulations. There is no way that New Zealanders should
allow these companies to have greater powers to determine
fishing – yet this is exactly what they and the Minister are
planning for the near future under plans for industry
management of fisheries."
"In 1996 scientists warned that
continued dredging would destroy the unparalleled
communities of marine animals in the area. By 1997
scientists were even more insistent that extinctions would
occur if there was not proper protection. They stressed the
occurrence of rare species in the 30-60 metre
depth
contours. Because of the Minister’s refusal to act in those
years when the government was first warned, we have already
lost much of the "Sponge Garden" and other communities.
Scallop dredgers and trawlers have ploughed up, smashed or
suffocated unique animals and plants in the last 3 years.
"This is a tragedy of extinction and irreversible
community loss being played before us. Under industry
pressure the Minister is doing as little as possible about
the most important biological area in New Zealand. No New
Zealander should stand by and allow these areas to be
trawled and dredged. I
t is a crime against the future
and a crime against
nature.