Whitebait rules needed to save fish from extinction – Forest And Bird

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As whitebait season ends, Forest & Bird is calling for action to protect endangered native fish before itโ€™s too late.

Four of the fish species in the whitebait catch are in trouble. They are ฤซnanga (at risk – declining), kลaro (at risk –ย declining), giant kลkopu (at risk –ย declining), and shortjaw kลkopu (threatened –ย nationally vulnerable).

โ€œWe need rules that protect whitebait. There are at least a dozen management options that would be better than what is currently in place, which is close to nothing,โ€ says Forest & Bird Freshwater Advocate, Annabeth Cohen.

โ€œItโ€™s truly baffling that there is no catch limit, license, or monitoring for the sale of these endangered animals. It is a free-for-all on how much of these endangered fish can be caught,โ€ says Ms Cohen.

โ€œThere are already some rivers closed to whitebaiting on the West Coast, and this kind of restriction should be considered around the country where populations are low or in decline.โ€

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โ€œThereโ€™s also good reason to consider a shorter whitebait season. Fishing inย August and September could mean better survival for kลaro and the three kลkopu species as they appear to migrate in higher numbers in October and November.โ€

In a Department of Conservation survey of nearly 3,000 people this year, 90% of respondents saidย the whitebait fishery should be managed more sustainably.

โ€œThe Government and the Department of Conservation need to improve this dismal situation as quickly as possible. There is overwhelming public support for better whitebait rules.โ€

Whitebait season closes tomorrow for the West Coast, and everywhere else on 30 November 2019.

Forest & Bird was a member of the Department of Conservationโ€™s Whitebait Working Group and asked for proposed management options to include a moratorium on commercial fishing. Public consultation on management options is expected in early 2020.

Public support for whitebait management:

Aย Department of Conservation surveyย of 2,870 people in May 2019 showed overwhelming public support for a more sustainable whitebait fishery.

Respondents mostly agreed with the use of many management options, including the following results:
โ€ข Thinks DOC should do something to make the fishery more sustainable: 90%.
โ€ข Thinks whitebait fishing is unsustainable in their area: 58%
โ€ข Thinks whitebait fishing is unsustainable nationwide: 68%
โ€ข Agrees there should be a license to fish: 60%
โ€ข Agrees there should be a catch limit: 77%
โ€ข Agrees with temporary closure of some rivers: 69%
โ€ข Agrees with permanently closing some rivers: 56%
โ€ข Agrees with a shorter fishing season: 57%
โ€ข Agrees with a ban on commercial fishing: 67%