Monday, May 20, 2013

Saving the Yellow-Eyed Penguin

Fishermen angry at call to extend set-net ban

By Nigel Benson
Monday May 20, 2013
 
There were fewer than 600 pairs of yellow-eyed penguins left on mainland New Zealand and about a quarter of those lived on the Otago Peninsula. Photo / Supplied 
 
Otago commercial fishermen have reacted with anger to a proposal to extend a ban on set-net fishing around the Otago Peninsula to help preserve yellow-eyed penguin colonies.
Forest and Bird called for the extension after a review in the Journal of Biological Conservation by BirdLife International reported 400,000 birds worldwide were killed by recreational and commercial set nets annually.

Forest and Bird claims the toll is conservative, as many deaths go unreported and because "ghost nets" can continue to capture birds long after the nets have been abandoned.
The society believes the fine nylon threads used in set nets are invisible to diving seabirds, such as penguins and shearwaters, as well as Hector's dolphins and turtles and wants to extend the ban from 4km to 20km.

However, Otago fishermen say the information behind the proposal is not based in fact.
"It's just not true. Set nets do not catch yellow-eyed penguins, or hector's dolphins or maui dolphins. If they've got proof, then let's see it. Bring the evidence to the table," Otakou fisherman Neil McDonald said yesterday.

"Forest and Bird seem to come out with this stuff whenever they need some funding, or something. These are international figures and have no relevance to New Zealand at all. They need to substantiate it," he said.

"Fishermen are not the barbarians we're made out to be. We're stake-holders in this industry and nobody cares more about it than we do. We've got nothing to feel guilty about. It's so frustrating."
Extending the set net ban would enhance the birds' chances of survival, Forest and Bird seabird advocate Karen Baird said.

"The current 4km-wide set net ban around the Otago Peninsula's coast should be extended to around the 150m depth contour; the extent to which yellow-eyed penguins are known to forage. This effectively means that the protection zone needs to extend to around 20km offshore."

There were fewer than 600 pairs of yellow-eyed penguins left on mainland New Zealand and about a quarter of those lived on the Otago Peninsula.

The birds were a cornerstone of Otago's $100 million a year eco-tourism industry, Ms Baird said.
"Yellow-eyed penguins are one of five species people go to New Zealand's ecotourism capital, Dunedin, to see. The others are royal albatross, sea lions, blue penguins and fur seals.

"Together, these species are akin to the 'big five' in Africa. Losing penguins on the peninsula would be like going to Kenya and not being able to see lions."

Yellow-eyed penguin colonies on the peninsula were particularly fragile this year, with 56 birds being found dead this breeding season due to an unknown toxin, Dunedin penguin authority Ursula Ellenberg said.

"This sudden die-off significantly adds to the pressure on this small population. Fifty-six dead adults represent a considerable portion of the remaining breeding stock. The cumulative effects of fisheries by-catch and other factors threaten this vitally-important yellow-eyed penguin population stronghold. Reducing the well-known risk of mortality in set nets would greatly enhance their chances of survival."

The New Zealand Federation of Commercial Fishermen said seabird deaths in set nets were exaggerated.

Observers on boats at Timaru and Taranaki had found no seabirds killed in set nets and extending the ban area could damage the Otago fishing industry, vice-president Allan Rooney said.
"It would make a major difference to the guys down there and also to the New Zealand economy."

source

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Penguin deaths could harm eco-tourism

By: Carla Penman | Lower South Island News | Sunday May 19 2013

An environmental group says eco-tourism might suffer if yellow-eyed penguins on the Otago Peninsula continue to die off due to set-net fishing.

BirdLife International's review revealed an alarming 400,00 sea-bird are killed because of set-netting each year.

The group's sea-bird conservation advocate Karen Baird says now is a good time to protect New Zealand's eco-tourism reputation and to push for an added 150 metre-wide extension to the current ban around the peninsula's coast.

"So there's a number of factors that are affecting their survival, and something like this disease is probably something that we can't control.

"But we can control set-nets."

Ms Baird says there is also a concern for Fiordland crested penguins, blue penguins and other diving sea-birds like shearwaters.

Photo: Yellow-eyed penguins (Department of Conservation)

source 

No comments: