Conservationists, local fishermen, and South Africa's Department of Environment Affairs have joined in support against gill or drift nets, mainly used by Asian fishing vessels, which kill thousands, possibly millions, of sea creatures each year, including dolphins, whales, seals, seabirds and turtles. These nets are also believed to kill huge numbers of fish which can mean the destruction of fishing industries and the loss of jobs.

Called drift nets because fishing boats leave them to drift in the ocean to catch more fish more easily, they are also known as gill nets because fish are caught and trapped by their gills. Local fishermen are particularly upset because the nets often catch younger fish such as tuna which live nearer the surface where the nets are used.


WALLS OF DEATH

The nets are used mainly by fishing fleets from Japan, Taiwan and South Korea, to catch squid, salmon and tuna in the North and South Pacific, Indian and Atlantic Oceans. Italian and Spanish ships are now also using this extremely destructive fishing method in the Mediterranean. Nicknamed "walls of death" these nets are made of a very strong monofilament (single strand) nylon mesh, and each net is between 8 - 12 metres deep and may be as long as 65 km, although usually between 32 - 40 km. The nets are often put into the sea at night, where they drift with the current, catching and killing anything that gets in their way, like huge underwater spiders' webs. This method of fishing is extremely wasteful. Not only is an estimated 40% to 50% of each catch lost when the net is hauled in, but uncounted numbers of fish are injured in the net and may escape only to die later.

These nets also catch many dolphins, whales, seals, turtles and seabirds which cannot easily see the almost invisible netting. In a study by Greenpeace, one dolphin will be drowned for every 9 tuna caught by this method in the South Pacific.


GHOST NETS

During fishing operations huge pieces of net often break away and continue killing, until eventually it is believed the nets sink with the weight of the dead fish, dolphins, whales, turtles and other creatures that Japanese fishing boats lose. These are known as "ghost nets". Japan estimates 17km of gill nets a night during the North Pacific drift net fishing season. More than 1 500 fishing vessels are using Gill or drift nets in the Pacific, Atlantic and Indian oceans. Many of these nets are being used in important feeding and breeding areas for whales, as well as across migration routes.


DID YOU KNOW?

  • It is estimated that more than 85 000 marine mammals - including 70 000 dolphins and porpoises and 14 000 seals - are drowned annually in the nets of the North Pacific drift net fishing vessels.

  • A further 750 000 seabirds are also believed to perish each year.


WHAT CAN YOU DO?

  • Support the Dolphin Action & Protection Group's campaign

  • Ensure that when you buy tuna it is marked with a "dolphin friendly" logo

  • Write to the Japanese and Taiwanese consulates (1910 Main Tower, Standard Bank Center, Heerengracht, Cape Town, 8001) as well as to the South African Department of Environmental Affairs (Private Bag X447, Pretoria, 2000) as well as local fishing companies and express your concern about these destructive fishing methods. Ask what they are doing to stop the use of drift nets.

  • Always pick up pieces of rubbish along beaches and rivers, especially fishing line, which can also trap and kill marine creatures.


CONSERVATION ACTION

In July 1989 South Africa followed the lead of countries such as Australia and New Zealand which have banned drift net fishing in their oceans. In December 1989 the United Nations recommended that all drift/gill net fishing be phased out by 1992.

In a resolution to the International Whaling Commission (IWC) meeting in July 1990, South Africa co-sponsored a resolution expressing concern about gill net fishing.

It is recognised that the way in which much of the tuna fish sold in recent years was caught led to the deaths of thousands of dolphins. Protests by people buying tuna fish in the United States and other countries has forced tuna fishermen to stop using these methods.


USEFUL ADDRESS

Dolphin Action & Protection Group, P.O. Box 22227, Fish Hoek 7975.


Created and maintained by: Jocelyn Collins
Last Updated: Thursday, February 01, 2001