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Political parties urged to back new marine strategy
24
August 2005 - Wellington Contact: Barry Weeber, Senior
Researcher, 04 801 2212, 021 627 329
Forest and
Bird today called on all political parties to sign up to the Government's new
strategy to address the environmental effects of fishing. The Government announced
its strategy at the Marine Sciences Society Conference. "There has
been cross-party support for the Biodiversity and Biosecurity Strategies. It would
be wonderful to see cross-party support for a strategy to reduce the environmental
effects of fishing," said Forest and Bird's senior researcher Barry Weeber.
"Commercial fishing has a serious impact on New Zealand's marine environment
and we're pleased to see that this is to be addressed. Each year thousands of
seabirds, hundreds of seals and over one hundred sea lions are killed unnecessarily
by poorly managed commercial fishing," he said. "The adoption
of this strategy nine years after the Fisheries Act required the ecological impact
of fishing to be taken into account has taken a lot longer than we would have
liked. But Forest and Bird is very pleased to see that progress is now being made,"
he said. "Forest and Bird looks forward to working with the Ministry
of Fisheries to make progress on the detail of the strategy. Effective implementation
will require robust management systems and standards. We will seek to ensure that
those standards provide the world-class level of protection that our world-class
marine environment requires," he said. Notes
The strategy
covers the impacts of bottom trawling on the seafloor, the deaths of seabirds,
marine mammals and turtles, and the impact of fishing on threatened species such
as sharks. Fishing is currently the human activity that causes the greatest
impact on the marine environment surrounding New Zealand. Each year: Around
10,000 seabirds, hundreds of seals, over 100 sea lions and many dolphins are killed
in New Zealand fisheries. - Corals and gorgonians hundreds of years old and
other special sea floor animals are destroyed over huge areas of New Zealand's
continental shelf by bottom trawling. - Thousands of sharks are caught in New
Zealand longline fisheries. Many have their fins cut off and are dumped over the
side. - Dredging for oysters and scallops destroys habitats and reduced species
diversity around New Zealand. Large glass coral (Bryozoans) reefs in Foveaux Strait
have been destroyed by dredging for oysters.
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