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NewKerala, India : No harm in shark fishing in Andaman Sea: Scientist

http://www.newkerala.com/news.php?action=fullnews & id=8976

 

 

 

Home > News > India News Posted on 24 July, 2005

 

 

No harm in shark fishing in Andaman Sea: Scientist

Port Blair: Despite objections from various NGOs, scientists favour shark

fishing in Andaman sea, saying cap on shark population is necessary.

 

'' If there is no check on shark population, in the long run shark population

will increase and others will decrease due to over predation, '' said Dr P Paul

Pandian, senior scientist and incharge of Andaman’s Fisheries Survey of India

(FSI) unit.

 

Dr Padian said unbridled shark population could bring drastic change in

ecosystem and therefore there was no harm in fishing shark in a controlled

manner.

 

The MoEF notification, dated July 11, 2001, brought protection to species such

as sharks, sea cucumbers, sea horses, sponges and corals, when it placed all

sharks on Schedule I of the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972 making their killing

illegal. The ban was later partially lifted in order to allow small-scale,

traditional shark fisheries to operate at subsistence levels.

 

On October 2002, the Andaman & Nicobar granted license for fishing sharks and

rays in the Andaman water. The notification, however, excludes a few rare

species in Schedule-I of the Wildlife Protection Act of 1972. They are

anoxypristis cuspidate, Carcharhinus hermiodon, Glyphius gangeticus, Glyphius

gluviatilis, Pristis microdon, Pristis zijsron, Rhynchobatus djiddensis and

Urogymnus asperrimus, according to official data.

 

Dr Pandian said some endangered species of sharks are also found in Andaman

water and the Fisheries Survey of India is organising a series of campaigns for

fishermen to teach the latter which shark species are to be caught.

 

'' We have posters of those shark species, which are banned for fishing and we

are giving huge publicity to spread awareness, '' the senior scientists of FSI

told UNI.

 

Environmental lobbies active in Andaman feel the same that shark can earn good

money for us, but, in other way round without killing them. '' Few small

countries of South Asia have set an example of earning money from sharks without

disturbing them in anyway, '' said Mr Subhasis Ray, General Secretary of HELP

(an NGO of Andamans (Healthy Environment by Less Pollution).

 

Mr Ray said in those countries they have evolved a tourist package called

''Shark watching'' in countries like Maldives this ''Shark Watching'' attract

tremendous tourist, thus a living shark earns good amount of money than a dead

one, some times even double than that. '' This kind of practices should be

promoted in Andaman to earn good revenue to attract more tourists, without

harming the fragile ecology of Andaman. '' Mr Ray said shark fishing if becomes

very necessary, it should be done without disturbing ecology for that capital

number of sharks should be kept intact so that they can reproduce new

generation.

 

'' A recent Australian study found that an area where sharks have been fished

out also showed an absence of spiny lobsters. It seems that in the absence of

predation by sharks, the octopus population has multiplied and in turn decimated

the lobsters. Thus maintaining ecological balance is must in nature, '' Mr Ray

told UNI.

 

UNI

 

 

 

 

 

 

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