Don’t gamble with last 60 Māui dolphins
Forest & Bird says WWF-NZ's plan for protecting Māui
dolphins is based on testing unproven methods on a species
that is almost extinct, and is urging the Government to
reject the proposal.
“New Zealanders don’t want to gamble with the extinction of dolphins. We respect WWF-NZ for attempting to find common ground with some in the fishing industry, but we do not support their proposed option, and we don’t believe other conservationists will either,” says Forest & Bird CE Kevin Hague.
“Māui dolphins deserve our very best efforts; they are very nearly extinct, and we must do everything we can to save them. The measures proposed in the WWF-industry submission create risks to the dolphins when New Zealand should do our utmost to eliminate those risks.
“None of WWF-NZ’s suggestions for continuing with dolphin-unfriendly fishing methods are proven to work. The Government’s threat management plan is the last chance to stop the extinction of the iconic New Zealand Māui dolphin. It is not the time to play games of chance, it is our last chance to act, and the Government must do so," says Mr Hague.
“Forest & Bird agree there should be recognition of potentially unfair costs of change for people in the fishing industry, but the answer to this should be to help meet the costs of shifting to dolphin-friendly fishing methods, not to hold back on the change.”
Key problems with WWF-industry
proposals:
This proposal is based on testing unproven
methods on a dolphin that is almost extinct.
The
mitigation methods risk wasting significant government
funding on unproven methods that would be better spent
transitioning to dolphin friendly fishing methods.
Passive Acoustic Monitoring only works over a short range,
requires a full time operator and the associated methods to
reduce the risk of killing dolphins are unproven and
potentially dangerous.
Even if Māui dolphins are seen by
fishers, the fishers don't immediately stop trawling,
meaning that any dolphins caught in the net out of sight are
likely to be killed.
No information is provided to
explain how thermal imaging might work – but has the same
risks as for other close range detections.
Drones have
limited flying time because of battery power and requires a
minimum of one operator and sometimes two if launched from a
boat. Range is limited to line of sight.
It seems
unlikely that all boats could afford to have dedicated staff
for these operations, or the demands placed on Marine Mammal
Observers and a 100% roll out across the fleet of such teams
is highly unlikely and at huge cost that could be better
used to transition fishers to dolphin friendly fishing
practices.
Detection of dolphins at sea is difficult even
in good sighting conditions and with highly skilled
observers. It is practically impossible to detect dolphins
at night with a range that would enable action.
The
proposals to reduce fisheries restrictions based on a lack
of observed dolphins does not take into account that
spotting exceedingly rare dolphins is unlikely.
The
proposal for yet more science before restrictions are placed
on the fishers is the antithesis of the precautionary
principal.
Toxoplasmosis signals the urgent need to
remove the risks we know we can manage.
Māui dolphins
needs the Government to:
Adopt a zero bycatch
goal.
Use only dolphin-friendly fishing practices within
the dolphins’ habitat. This means excluding recreational
and commercial set-net and trawl fishing in waters out to
the 100m depth contour on a precautionary basis as well as
within the proposed extensions to the marine mammal
sanctuaries.
Prohibit new oil and gas well drilling and
exploration, seismic surveys, and minerals exploration and
extraction within the precautionary habitat of Māui
dolphins.
Introduce package of assistance for those who
are not able to relocate their fishing effort, change
methods to those that do not catch dolphins, or who lack
quota and might find their operation is unviable.
Adopt a
toxoplasmosis action plan, but not at the expense of urgent
protection action, particularly for Māui dolphins. Weakened
immune systems and degraded habitat make dolphins more
vulnerable to toxoplasmosis.
Establish a work programme
with regional and district councils, and community groups to
manage sedimentation, erosion, agricultural run-off, storm
water and sewerage outflows, and debris (e.g.
plastics)
ends