Jakarta Globe, February 20, 2013
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| In this handout picture taken on June 14, 2012 and released by Conservation International on February 20, 2013, a diver tags a whale shark in Raja Ampat. (AFP Photo) |
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Indonesia
has announced a new shark and manta ray sanctuary, the first to protect the
species in the rich marine ecosystem of the Coral Triangle, known as the
“Amazon of the ocean.”
Environmentalists
on Wednesday welcomed the creation of the 46,000-square-kilometer protection
zone, in an area at risk from both overfishing and climate change.
The local
government in Raja Ampat on the western tip of New Guinea island announced the
move this week, issuing local regulations to ban the finning and fishing of
sharks in the area, a tourist destination popular with divers.
Rizal
Algamar, Indonesia director of the Nature Conservancy, described the
regulations in a joint statement with Conservation International as a
“breakthrough in policy.”
“Scientific
evidence states that the value of live sharks and manta rays far outweighs the
one-time profit of dead sharks and manta rays, benefiting a growing world-class
and increasingly popular marine tourism and dive destination,” he said.
Scientists
have warned the Coral Triangle, which spreads across a vast area of Southeast
Asia’s waters, is under threat, with heat-trapping carbon gases blamed for
creating acidic seas hostile to much marine life.
Overfishing
has also been a problem, but the sanctuary will support existing no-take zones
that have helped shark numbers slowly recover.
“Sharks in
particular play an important role, as apex predators at the top of the food
chain, maintaining fisheries and ecosystem health,” the statement said.
The
sanctuary is also expected to prevent a drop in manta ray numbers, with the
species’ gills increasingly used in Asian medicines.
Shark
populations are in a rapid and steep decline worldwide, facing intense pressure
from fishing and in high demand for shark fin soup.
Up to 73
million sharks are killed annually, mostly for their fins, the statement said.
As a result, many shark species have suffered declines greater than 75 percent
and in some species up to 90 percent or more.
Indonesia
ranks as the world’s largest exporter of sharks and rays.
Agence France-Presse
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