For
Immediate Release: February 4, 2002
Contact:
, American Bird Conservancy, 202/234-7181 ext. 207
A new report, SUDDEN DEATH ON THE HIGH
SEAS – LONGLINE FISHING: A GLOBAL CATASTROPHE FOR SEABIRDS,
published by American Bird Conservancy (ABC), documents the
widespread killing of hundreds of thousands of seabirds, including
albatrosses, on longline fishing hooks each year. The report
finds that seabird populations are being decimated by this
practice, but that simple solutions exist to prevent the catastrophe.
Albatrosses, petrels, shearwaters, and fulmars are killed
when they are attracted to the bait attached to hooks, reeled
out from the sterns of fishing vessels on long, monofilament
lines. The great ocean wanderers snatch or dive on the bait
as lines are set, and either swallow the hooks or are hooked
in the wing or other body part and pulled under the sea to
drown. Thousands of miles of lines, carrying hundreds of millions
of hooks, are set by longliners throughout the world’s
oceans each year.
Scientists agree that longlining is the
newest and greatest threat to albatrosses and certain other
seabirds. Sixteen of the world’s 21 Albatross species
are now listed by the IUCN World Conservation Union as threatened
with extinction, and all have been linked to longline fishing
mortality. In 1991, it was estimated that Japanese longliners
alone were killing up to 44,000 albatrosses per year. ABC’s
report finds that among the hundreds of thousands of seabirds
that die worldwide, more than 20,000 are killed annually in
the U.S. Alaskan longline fishery. The Hawaiian longline fleet
kills thousands more. The United States is responsible for
the deaths of the federally listed, Endangered Short-tailed
Albatross and the globally threatened, IUCN-listed Black-footed
Albatross, as well as the rapidly declining Laysan Albatross.
ABC is calling for the U.S. to demonstrate
international leadership by requiring measures that will prevent
this needless slaughter. This includes mandatory deployment
of by-catch reduction measures on all U.S. vessels, more independent
observers aboard fishing vessels to better document the problem,
stronger regulations to prevent U.S. imports of fish, such
as Chilean sea bass (Patagonian toothfish), that has been
illegally caught without regard to seabird mortality, and
adoption of effective National Plans of Action under a United
Nations (UN) agreement.
Simple, effective and inexpensive measures
that can virtually eliminate seabird deaths, without affecting
fishing success, already exist. For example, special bird_scaring
lines have been tested by researchers on Alaskan vessels and
shown to virtually eliminate albatross and most other seabird
by-catch. These lines are being given at no cost to Alaskan
longliners under a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service program.
ABC believes that the use of these lines in conjunction with
other simple and cost-effective measures will eliminate seabird
mortality in almost all longline fisheries.
"The current slaughter of the long-lived
albatrosses, petrels and other seabirds could easily be avoided
with no loss in fishing efficiency. To prevent the collapse
in the populations of these great birds, we need the U.S.
to stop the killing in its own longline fisheries and to exert
international leadership through implementation of the UN’s
plan of action on seabirds," stated Gerald Winegrad,
ABC’s Vice President for Policy.
The report is available on line at www.abcbirds.org/policy/seabird_report.pdf.
For more information, contact: David Fischer, American Bird
Conservancy, 202 234-7181 x 205
"WITH HIS CRUEL BOW HE LAID FULL LOW
THE HARMLESS ALBATROSS"
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
END
American
Bird Conservancy (ABC) is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization,
dedicated to the conservation of wild birds and their habitats
throughout the Americas. The fundamental role of ABC is to
build coalitions of conservation groups, scientists, and members
of the public, to tackle key bird priorities using the best
resources available. ABC has programs to address the threats
to birds from such diverse causes as habitat loss, pesticides,
cats and communication towers. For more information on ABC
visit www.abcbirds.org or call (202) 452-1535.
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