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| Members of the International Whaling Commission attend their 64th Annual Meeting in Panama City on Wednesday. (AFP Photo/ Rodrigo Arangua) |
Panama
City. A scientific body on Thursday urged Mexico and New Zealand to take
immediate action to prevent the extinction of small marine mammals that are
being killed by gillnets set by the fishing industry.
The
International Whaling Commission voiced fears for Maui’s dolphins — some of the
world’s smallest dolphins found only on New Zealand’s North Island — and the
vaquita, a 1.5-meter (five-foot) porpoise in the Gulf of California.
The
Commission’s scientific committee estimated that New Zealand had just 55 Maui’s
dolphins left that are at least one year old and that Mexico had no more than
220 vaquitas, with the number declining despite conservation methods.
In a report
at an annual meeting in Panama City, the committee voiced “extreme concern”
over the future of the vaquita and urged the immediate elimination of gillnets
that could entangle the cetaceans.
In New
Zealand, the committee also called for a prompt ban on gillnets and for
establishing a safe corridor for Maui’s dolphins between North and South
islands.
The two
countries both said that they were taking action. Gerard von Bohemen, New
Zealand’s commissioner, pointed to a recent decision to expand a ban on fishing
nets along North Island’s western Taranaki coast.
Mexico’s
commissioner, Lorenzo Rojas Bracho, said that his country had cracked down on
illegal fishing and that a working group in charge of shrimping was considering
a net ban from next year.
Aimee
Leslie, the marine turtle and cetacean manager at conservationist group WWF,
said that the commitments by Mexico and New Zealand were not enough.
“Unless
these governments remove all gillnets now they will be responsible for the loss
of these animals forever,” she said.
Austria’s
representative Michael Stachowitsch voiced frustration over conservation
efforts in Mexico and said: “Frankly, it’s time for diplomatic niceties and
strategies to take a back seat to immediate, concrete action.”
“When a
bridge collapses someone takes responsibility. When a bank or a corporation
goes under, there is shame and someone takes responsibility,” he said. “How
much greater must the responsibility or shame be when a highly developed mammal
species is lost forever?” he said.
The
International Whaling Commission is known for its annual showdowns over whaling
by Japan, Norway and Iceland, but the scientific committee meets separately and
is formed by experts.

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