(San
Jose, Costa Rica -
October 22, 2008)
During the recent
IUCN World Conservation Congress, held in Barcelona
from October 5 to 14, three resolutions were adopted calling for improved
protection of leatherback turtles, sharks and whales.While the leatherback resolution focuses on
regional populations of Eastern Pacific leatherback turtles, the shark and
whale resolutions address global conservation policy.
The leatherback
resolution urges nations to protect Eastern Pacific leatherback sea turtles from
industrial fisheries by creating marine protected areas along migratory routes,
specifically the waters between CocosIsland (Costa Rica)
and Galapagos Islands (Ecuador),
where the highest risk of interaction with fisheries
occurs.The plan to open and
close portions of the migratory corridor to fishing as turtles enter and exit
the area, is based on scientific recommendations by Stanford researcher George Shillinger and
an international team of co-authors who believe their work may make “adaptive”
closures a realistic conservation approach.Other endangered species, such as hammerhead sharks, would also benefit
from temporary closures to fisheries in this corridor.
The shark
resolution calls for a global policy against shark finning, the abominable
practice of slicing off the shark’s fins and discarding the body to supply the
Asian shark fin soup market.Even though
the practice is widely condemned, shark finning is still extensively practiced,
due in part to the difficulty of implementing existing shark finning bans.A fins attached policy, which requires sharks
to be landed with fins attached naturally, is the easiest and most reliable way
to guarantee that shark finning did not occur.The resolution calls for the “fins-attached” policy to be globally
adopted by all fishing nations.
The whale
resolution affirms that the non-lethal use of whales, such as responsible whale
watching tourism, contributes to the conservation of whales and can provide
valuable benefits in terms of socio economic development, and calls on all
governments and IUCN members to strengthen cetacean management and conservation
strategies, and consider extending or designating marine protected areas and
sanctuaries.
All three
proposals were sponsored by the Costa Rican non-profit Pretoma.“Costa Rica
has been a major player in promoting efficient shark finning
regulations at international forums such as the United Nations and recently
played a major role conserving whales at the International Whaling Commission”,
explained Randall Arauz, President of Pretoma.”We hope the approval of these resolutions provides the political
platform for the country to continue its efforts to promote and attain efficient
regional and global marine conservation measures in the future”, said Arauz
optimistically.
Pretoma partnered
with Humane Society International’s Rebecca Regnery who provided her expertise to help the
shark and whale resolutions to be adopted by strong margins in spite of considerable
debate.“The
shark finning resolution strengthens the last resolution adopted by the IUCN on
this issue in 2004 which urged countries to consider fins-attached among less
effective measures including a complicated fin-to-body weight ratio”, according
to Ms. Regnery.“The whale resolution
will help spread the message that whales are more valuable alive than dead.”
Leatherback sea turtles
survived the asteroid that killed off the dinosaurs, but they are unlikely to
survive our unsustainable appetite for swordfish and tuna," said Todd
Steiner, Executive Director of the U.S.-based Turtle Island Restoration Network
and a member of the IUCN Marine Turtle Specialist Group. "If leatherbacks
are to survive the coming decades, we must convert talk to action; otherwise we
will lose one of the most ancient creatures on the planet, in the next ten to
thirty years”.
More
than 8,000 scientists, government officials and environmental organizations
from over 250 nations supported the resolutions.
Pretoma’s
participation in the IUCN World Conservation Congress was possible thanks to
the support of the Whitley Fund for Nature (WFN), Humane Society International
(HSI), the World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA), and Turtle Island
Restoration Network (TIRN).