New Zealand - public supports set net ban to protect rare dolphins

Having over 90% of the public support anything is amazing to hear in any scenario and in this case Kiwis are getting behind the protection of a very rare species of dolphin in their waters.

This is from the New Zealand Herald - 27 August 2007

The New Zealand public wants a ban on set nets and the establishment of a marine mammal sanctuary to protect the critically endangered Maui's dolphin.

Public consultation undertaken by Forest and Bird, centred in Auckland, Waikato and Northland, has found almost total support for a set net ban (98 per cent) to protect Maui's dolphins.

There was also strong support for the establishment of a marine mammal sanctuary off the northwest coast of the North Island, with 96 per cent of respondents supporting a sanctuary to protect the dolphins.

Forest and Bird conservation advocate Kirstie Knowles said the strong public support for a set net ban and to establish a marine mammal sanctuary for Maui's dolphin meant the Government should include those measures in its threat management plan to protect Maui's and Hector's dolphins.

The threat management plan was expected to be announced by the Government early this week.

Once found around most of the New Zealand coastline and numbering more than 29,000 in the 1970s, Hector'sdolphins were now mainly found in some parts of the South Island and numbered fewer than 8000, Ms Knowles said.

They were listed as "endangered' by the IUCN (World Conservation Union), and were at serious risk of extinction.

"Set nets are the main threat to Hector's dolphins, responsible for more than 60 per cent of their deaths in cases where the cause of death is known," Ms Knowles said.

Maui's dolphin, the North Island sub-species of Hector's dolphin, was listed as critically endangered on the IUCN Red List of species at risk of extinction. Just 111 remain, making them the world's rarest marine dolphin.

see

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10460005


Contributed by Tim Hochgrebe added 2007-08-30

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