Forest & Bird (BirdLife in New Zealand)
urges people to have a say on a government plan to reduce the numbers of
seabirds killed every year by the fishing industry.
The Ministry for Primary Industries and the
Department of Conservation are seeking comments on the draft National Plan of
Action for Seabirds. Submissions close at 5pm on November 21.
Recent estimates suggest that up to 40,000
seabirds die each year in New Zealand waters after getting caught in fishing
nets or on fishing hooks.
“New Zealand seabirds really need people to make
a submission on this document,” says Forest & Bird Seabird Advocate Karen
Baird.
“Otherwise, there is a real chance that the
final version of the plan won’t adequately safeguard our threatened albatrosses
and petrels.
“The species most at risk from commercial
fishing in New Zealand is the endemic black petrel, which often gets caught by
fishers pursuing snapper and bluenose in the Hauraki Gulf.
“The National Plan of Action for Seabirds will
shape government and fishing industry efforts to reduce New Zealand’s very high
seabird by-catch problem over the next five years, so it’s imperative that we
get this right,” says Karen Baird.
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