IWC calls for net bans to prevent extinctions
IWC calls for net bans to prevent extinctions
Posted on 06 July 2012 |
The International Whaling Commission (IWC) has taken up the cause of some of the worlds most critically endangered marine mammals by calling on governments to keep fishing nets out of their waters to prevent entanglement deaths.
Mexicos vaquita porpoise and the Mauis dolphin of New Zealand were a focus of discussions today between countries gathered in Panama City for the commissions annual meeting. Governments urged Mexico and New Zealand to take all possible measures immediately to save the animals from extinction.
Its time for diplomatic niceties and step-wise strategies to take a back seat to immediate, concrete action with no compromise, said Michael Stachowitsch, delegate of Austria to the IWC.
There are believed to be fewer than 200 vaquitas left, and only 55 remaining Mauis dolphins over a year old. Both animals are severely threatened by accidental bycatch in gillnet fisheries. A total ban on the use of gillnets in the entire ranges of both populations is needed to secure their survival, according to the IWC Scientific Committees report.
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