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7 Aug 06 Shrimp Fishermen Get a Taste for Environment-Friendly Trawling Yahoo News 6 Aug 06 New shrimp nets said helping save fish stocks By Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent OSLO (Reuters) - Fishing nets with "exit holes" being introduced under a project to salvage depleted world fisheries are helping shrimp trawlers reduce unwanted extra catches by up to 70 percent, a U.N. study showed on Sunday. Catching shrimp, the world's most traded marine commodity worth almost $12 billion a year, is hugely wasteful because the fine-mesh nets also scoop up everything from tiny fish to sharks and turtles, which usually end up discarded dead. The project in 12 tropical nations, including Mexico and the Philippines, "has dramatically cut the unwanted catch of young fish, turtles and other 'by-catch' by as much as 30 to 70 percent," the U.N. Environment Programme said in a statement. "We are seeing some promising preliminary results," said Monique Barbut, the head of the U.N.'s Global Environment Facility which is funding a four-year-old project costing more than $9 million. "Over 60 percent of what is currently caught in the global shrimp fishery is discarded, making it among the most environmentally damaging in the world," she said. Worldwide losses -- mostly because young fish are caught before they reach maturity -- are estimated at billions of dollars, adding to problems of overfishing. New trawler nets include metal grilles that let shrimp through into the main bulb-shape net but stop bigger fish or turtles and force them out through an "exit hole" in the side. Other types of nets have large holes on the sides near the front -- fish are smart enough to swim out against the pull of the trawler while shrimp lack the intelligence to spot the exit. The United States is among countries banning wild shrimp imports from nations that do not use such environmentally friendly nets. The U.N.-funded measures also include training, high tech sensors and underwater monitors that help efficiency. "There are important lessons to be learned here for other fisheries and indeed across a wide range of environmental challenges from forestry to energy," said Achim Steiner, head of the U.N. Environment Programme. The project comprised Indonesia, the Philippines, Cameroon, Nigeria, Bahrain, Iran, Colombia, Cuba, Costa Rica, Trinidad and Tobago, Venezuela and Mexico. The global marine shrimp catch in 2004 totaled 3.47 million tonnes, or four percent of marine capture fisheries by weight, according to Jeremy Turner, head of the fishing technology service at the U.N.'s Food and Agriculture Organization. Including aquaculture production, shrimp accounted for 16.5 percent of fish products traded by value in 2004, or almost $12 billion out of a total $72 billion. UNEP 7 Aug 06 Shrimp Fishermen Get a Taste for Environment-Friendly Trawling Global Environment Facility-Backed Project Leading to Significant Cuts in By-Catch in Some Seas Third GEF Assembly 29 to 30 August 2006, Cape Town Washington / Nairobi / Rome, 7 August 2006 Shrimp lovers can tuck into their favourite food with a less guilty conscience courtesy of a pioneering project that is reducing the environmental damage from shrimp trawling. The project, funded by the multi-billion dollar Global Environment Facility (GEF), has dramatically cut the unwanted catch of young fish, turtles and other 'by-catch' by as much as 30 to 70 percent in some countries. Shrimp fishermen, participating in the project, are also benefiting from the innovative initiative. In Mexico, one of the 12 countries involved, the deployment of environmentally friendly trawls allied to improved fishing methods has cut fuel costs on trawlers. Significant successes are also being registered in Colombia and the Philippines. In almost all participating countries, sea trials have been conducted with improved trawls. Economic benefits are emerging in other ways. Trawl nets now contain less unwanted, non-target fish, and other marine organisms--this is making it easier and quicker for fishermen to process the shrimp and thus leads to savings in terms of time and money and improved quality of the catch. Monique Barbut, the new Chief Executive Officer of the GEF which was established by governments to fund environment projects in the developing world, said: "It is no secret that fishing has become an area of enormous international concern with many stocks being fished unsustainably". "Meanwhile, far too many young fish of target and non-target species are being caught before they can mature. Worldwide losses, as a result of juvenile fish failing to reach marketable maturity, are thought to run into billions of dollars a year. Many of the techniques used by fishing fleets can also harm the wider environment including the sea bed," she added. "This project to address by-catch in the shrimp fishery is particularly timely and urgent and I am delighted that we are seeing some promising preliminary results. Currently over 60 per cent of what is currently caught in the global shrimp fishery is discarded making it among the most environmentally damaging in the world", said Ms Barbut. Achim Steiner, United Nations Under Secretary General and the Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) which is coordinating the just over $9 million project executed by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), said that the four year-old initiative could be a blueprint for better use of the world's finite natural resources. "I think there are important lessons to be learnt here for other fisheries and indeed across a wide range of environmental challenges from forestry to energy. Namely that creative management, technological improvements and a willingness by a wide range of partners to embrace new ideas, can deliver significant improvements towards the sustainable use of economically and biologically important resources," he added. Under the project the FAO has been assisting shrimp trawler fishermen, local artisanal fishermen and regional fisheries organizations to introduce different by-catch reduction technologies, taking into account specific environmental conditions and interests of the participating countries. FAO has also been working with the respective national governments in developing the necessary legal framework and strengthening cooperation between countries and regions. Ichiro Nomura, Assistant Director-General of the FAO Fisheries Department, said: "Reducing by-catch is a high priority for my organization. If less young fish and non target species are inadvertently caught, they can be left to mature to the benefit of fishermen and their livelihoods and for the millions of developing country people who rely almost exclusively on fish as a vital source of healthy and nutritious protein". The GEF-funded project, entitled 'Reduction of Environment Impacts from Tropical Shrimp Trawling through the Introduction of By-Catch Reduction Technologies and Change of Management', was launched in 2002. It involves the countries of Indonesia and the Philippines and the intergovernmental organization SEAFDEC in Asia; Cameroon and Nigeria in West Africa; Bahrain and Iran in the Gulf Region and Colombia, Cuba, Costa Rica, Mexico, Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela in Latin America and the Caribbean. Different countries are moving at different speeds. However, preliminary result of the initiative, which is scheduled for completion in 2008, are now beginning to emerge in several of the participating nations. Mexico Some of the best results are coming from Mexico where over 2,000 shrimpers trawl off the Pacific and Gulf of Mexico coasts. A number of smaller ones work inshore areas. Workshops and training courses have been convened and shrimp fishermen enlisted in the project. This has included fitting research boats with high tech sensors and underwater monitors that are assessing the effectiveness of the new trawls and trawling methods. Commercial shrimp trawlers were equipped with new designed gears. The new technologies are accepted by the fishermen and 140 vessels are using the new gears voluntarily. "Preliminary results show a by-catch reduction of 30 percent to 60 per cent, a reduction in fuel consumption and a 20 percent increase in the shrimp catch," says the latest progress report. "Also due to improvements in shrimp quality and catches, durability of the trawls as well as fuel consumption reductions, (fishermen) are very keen to use the new prototypes and the number of vessels that use the new designs, materials and fish eye are increasing," it adds. Colombia Promising results are also emerging in Colombia where the shrimp fleet numbers some 100 operational vessels many of which work the Colombian Caribbean Sea. Here fishermen have been testing three new trawls designs also fitted with by-catch reduction devices. Preliminary results indicate that unwanted by-catch can be reduced by over a fifth with fuel consumption cut by a similar amount. Philippines The trials in the Philippines have focused on boat owners and fishermen operating in the major shrimp fishing areas in Lingayen Gulf, Manila Bay, San Miguel Bay and Calbayog City in the Samar Sea. The project is being carried out in collaboration with the Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center (SEAFDEC). Preliminary results, using three different kinds of By-catch Reduction Devices, show reductions in unwanted fish of between a third and almost 70 per cent. Close to 20 boat owners are so pleased with the results, they are using the new trawls and gear voluntarily. Ms. Marisa Lakindanum, owner-operator of 6 shrimp trawlers, said "The technology potentially reduces our catch of juveniles and other small fishes, and I can only laud the efforts to involve us in activities like this and enable us to appreciate and see for ourselves its benefits. In return, what I can offer is our cooperation and to do our share to protect and sustain our fish resources." Mel Senen Sarmiento, Mayor of Calbayog City who is supporting the implementation of the project in the local trawl fleet in the Samar Sea, added "The technology can help us not only to continue fishing but also ensure that there is always enough fish for the local populace alongside livelihoods and income for fishermen." Venezuela An excellent example of cooperation between countries is happening with artisanal fishermen in Lake Maracaibo where the by-catch represents around 72 percent of the total catch, and amounts to 14.000 tonnes or more of discarded small fish in a year. Mexican fishermen and researchers are assisting Venezuela in testing a typical Mexican gear called 'Suripera', which is more environmentally-friendly than the existing net of choice, the beach seines. On the other hand, tests with the 'fish eye' in the Orinoco delta shrimp fishery, where artisanal trawl vessels from Venezuela and Trinidad-Tobago operate, have proved that the device is efficient in the release of half the small fish entering the net while retaining most of the shrimp. The fish eye is an 'escape' hatch out of which swimming young fish can exit the net while the free floating shrimp remain caught. Other countries, including those in West Africa, the Gulf and the Caribbean, are at various stages with some having completed preliminary sea trials and others still in discussions with fishermen as to the scale of the by-catch problem and likely solutions. Notwithstanding its achievements and successes, the GEF-funded project only addresses the negative impacts of by-catch, not the physical impacts of shrimp trawling on the sea bottom, nor the social impacts on coastal fishing communities. links Related articles on Wild shores |
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