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Whale
sharks in an aquarium in the southern island of Jeju (Aqua Planet
Jeju/AFP/File)
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MANILA —
Asia and Pacific nations agreed at a meeting in the Philippines on Wednesday to
take steps to protect whale sharks in a victory for the world's largest fish,
officials said.
Western and
Central Pacific Fisheries Commission nations agreed that tuna fishers must stop
setting their nets around the vulnerable giants in order to catch smaller fish
that gather underneath them, said Palau fishing official Nanette Malsol.
She said
the deal binds tuna-fishing nations such as the United States, China, and
Japan, and was a victory for a coalition of small Pacific nations, called the
Parties to the Nauru Agreement, that has been campaigning for this measure.
"This
rule follows negotiations by the Parties to the Nauru Agreement for three years
to try and get the big fishing nations to adopt protections for whale
sharks," said Malsol, who also heads the coalition.
The small
Pacific island nations said they already imposed such a rule on their own tuna
fishers.
Smaller
fish like tuna congregate under whale sharks, so fishermen often seek the
giants and set their nets under them to catch the other fish, said Angelo
Villagomez, a spokesman of the the US-based Pew Environment Group.
As a
result, whale sharks, which are considered a vulnerable species, often get
entangled in tuna nets and die, he said.
Fifty whale
sharks were recorded having died from tuna nets in 2010 and 19 in 2011, said
Villagomez, adding that there were likely many other cases which went
unreported.
Parties to
the agreement reached at the Manila meeting Wednesday must free any whale shark
that gets caught in their nets and must also record and report any incidents
involving the giant fish, Malsol said.
The Pew
group, which is also attending the meeting, is pressing for other measures to
protect 143 other threatened species of sharks that are affected by tuna
fishers.
However
Villagomez said he doubted they would pass as some fishing countries actively
catch these sharks.
Whale
sharks measure as much as 12 metres (39 feet) long but are harmless to humans
and feed on tiny marine animals. They have become popular tourist attractions
in countries such as the Philippines, Mexico and Australia.

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