110-150 Hector’s, Maui’s Dolphins die in gill nets
News Release 8 April 2008
NIWA Report on
Hector’s and Maui’s Dolphins estimates 110 – 150 Die
in Commercial Gill nets Every Year
A new Government
commissioned report by the National Institute for Water &
Atmospheric Research (NIWA) confirms that Hector’s and
Maui’s dolphins are being fished to extinction. The report
substantiates urgent calls for action from Care for the Wild
International (CWI), a wildlife charity that promotes the
conservation and welfare of wild animals around the world
through direct projects, education, research and
science-based advocacy.
Commenting on the NIWA report, which analyses the risk commercial set netting poses to Hector’s and Maui’s dolphins, CWI’s Chief Executive Dr Barbara Maas said, “Experts have warned about the failure to fully protect these highly endangered animals against this key threat for more than two decades. Banning all gill-netting is crucial to the survival of Hector’s and Maui’s dolphins.”
The report calculates that each year between 110 and 150 Hector’s dolphins die in commercial gill nets, and concludes that under current management Hector’s dolphin numbers will continue to decline to the point where extinction is the most likely outcome. South Coast South Island Hector’s dolphins and the North Island subspecies, the Maui’s dolphin, have been particularly hard hit. Complete protection against human impacts, including commercial and recreational gill-netting as well as trawling, would allow numbers to slowly double to some 15,000 over the next 50 years.
Maui’s dolphins are already listed as ‘Critically Endangered’ on the International Red List of Endangered Species (World Conservation Union – www.redlist.org), the highest category, and face an extremely high risk of extinction in the immediate future. Hector’s dolphins are ‘Endangered’ and face a high risk of extinction in the near future.
Dr Maas says that 110 – 150 Hector’s deaths a year is scandalous, given that the species will not survive if more than ten dolphins are killed.
Associate Professor of Zoology at Otago University, Dr Liz Slooten, has studied Hector’s and Maui’s dolphins for a quarter of a century and is the world’s leading expert on these species. She points out that “despite the report’s gloomy predictions, NIWA’s analysis is in fact optimistic, because it excludes dolphin deaths caused by recreational gill-netting and trawling. It also fails to consider fisheries mortality in North Island harbours, although Maui’s dolphins are caught there as well,” she says.
Dr Maas says, “The ‘zero net fishing’ measures considered in the NIWA report go well beyond any of the management options proposed in the Draft Threat Management Plan (TMP) and consequently are much more effective. The best option the TMP offers the dolphins would still allow gill-netting in several areas where the animals live, including Tasman Bay and Golden Bay, and does not effectively address the threat posed by trawling.
“While we have some reservations about the NIWA report; it stresses the urgent need to protect these animals far better than the TMP provides. The best the TMP would do is to give Hector’s dolphins less than a 50/50 chance of recovering to half their original numbers by 2050. This is in conflict with the Government’s statutory mandate to base its decision on the best available evidence and to ensure for Critically Endangered, Endangered or Vulnerable species become non-threatened as soon as possible, but at least within 20 years.
The Government is expected to announce its response to the TMP next month and has invited public submissions based on the information presented in the NIWA report [See Analysis of Final NIWA Report, Maas & Slooten attached (PDF)] by 20th April (www.fish.govt.nz/en-nz/Consultations/Hector+new/default.htm)
The NIWA report was presented on the 17th September last year, just three weeks after the publication of the TMP on 29th August. It is regrettable that these figures were not made public for six months.
“Relative to other international conservation problems, ensuring the survival of the Hector’s and Maui’s dolphins is easy. But unless the Government acts decisively and stands firm against industry pressure, it will only be a matter of time before the Hector’s and Maui’s dolphins become extinct,” Dr Maas says.
ENDS
Analysis of Final NIWA Report, Maas & Slooten attached (PDF)
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Notes to editors:
1. Care for the Wild International
(CWI)
CWI is a conservation and animal welfare charity
that funds practical projects around the world. We make
areas safe from poachers, rehabilitate sick or injured
animals and provide sanctuary for those who can not return
to the wild.
We also act as a global voice for wildlife
through research, education and advocacy, and expose animal
cruelty and wildlife crime.
2. Hector’s Dolphins Facts
- Hector’s dolphins are classified as Endangered
by the Red List of Endangered Species. This means that
Hector’s are “facing a high risk of extinction in the
near future”.
- Numbers have declined from
21,000-29,000 in the 1970s to less than 8,000 today.
-
Commercial and recreational fishing is responsible for
almost 70% of Hector’s dolphin deaths. Because not all
deaths are reported, this is a minimum estimate.
- Other
threats include boat strikes, pollution, sand-mining,
coastal development and harassment.
- Existing protection
measures have failed to halt the species decline. Hector’s
dolphins will only be safe into the future if all threats of
commercial and recreational fishing are removed.
3.
Maui’s Dolphins Facts
- Maui’s dolphins are classified
as Critically Endangered by the Red List of Endangered
Species. This means that Maui’s dolphins are “facing an
extremely high risk of extinction in the immediate
future”.
- Only 111 Maui’s dolphins survive.
-
There are just 25 breeding females left amongst about 60
breeding adults.
- Females only have one calf every 2-4
years and do not reach breeding age until they are 7-9 years
old. These species’ potential for recovery is therefore
extremely slow.
- Maui’s dolphins prefer shallow waters
up to 100m deep and are therefore highly vulnerable to
nets.
4. Images and footage
Images and footage is
available at
www.careforthewild.com/files/pictures13