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FLORA AND FAUNA
UN offers wider protections to 31 species of animals
by Brooks Hays
Quito, Ecuador (UPI) Nov 10, 2014


Michigan State scientists: don't forget about freshwater fish!
East Lansing, Mich. (UPI) Nov 10, 2014 - There's power in numbers -- but also in concentration. Ocean fishing is not only big business, but it's consolidated. Because of that, its interests are well-spoken for and widely considered when it comes to policy decisions, resource management and conservation efforts.

The opposite is true for freshwater fishing -- according to a new study by researchers at Michigan State University -- which happens in isolation and is largely unaccounted for, losing out to other freshwater interests like hydropower and irrigation. This fact, they argue, could have important implications for food security, especially in developing countries.

"Right now, society looks at water and rarely sees or values the fish within," William Taylor, Distinguished Professor in Global Fisheries Systems at Michigan State, said in a press release. "As such, society often unwittingly uses the water and the land in ways that negatively impact fish habitat, ultimately affecting fish production and distribution."

"All over the world there are people catching fish to feed themselves and their families," explained lead study So-Jung Youn, a graduate student in Michigan State's sustainability program. "Individually it may not seem like much, but it adds up to a significant amount of food, and it's a perspective people too often forget."

The interests of those who fish, for both sustenance and recreation, are regularly ignored -- not only because they practice in isolation and are often disorganized, but also because their activities are often under- or un-reported.

Only 156 of more than 230 countries and territories offered freshwater fisheries production data to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization in 2010.

Taylor and So-Jung say individual fishermen, hauling carp, tilapia and other freshwater species from rivers, lakes, ponds and reservoirs, play a significant but unacknowledged part of the food supply system and local economy. As more and more rivers are dammed and rerouted, and as wetlands are drained, small-scale fishing and the food resources they provide are increasingly under threat.

"It's not a question of whether we should stop using water for other purposes, but we need to consider what harms are being created, and if they can be mitigated," Youn said. "People are losing jobs and important sources of food because fish habitats are being degraded, greatly reducing fish production in these waters."

The study was published last month in the journal Global Food Security.

The conservation body of the United Nations has offered wider, stronger protection to 31 species of animals, including a variety of vulnerable birds, sharks and whales.

The species were granted new, more protective classification only after several days of intense debate among conservationists from across the globe.

At the closing of the Convention on Migratory Species conference in Ecuador, not all 31 species received the same level of protection. Some species were upgraded to an Appendix II listing, which requires international cooperation in organizing comprehensive conservation plans. Other, more vulnerable species were granted an Appendix I listing -- the strongest level of protection, including bans on killing and other similarly strict measures.

The most iconic species to be re-listed was the polar bear, which remains increasingly threatened by melting ice, Arctic oil exploration and hunting. The polar bear is now included in Appendix II.

"We are pleased to see the polar bear joining a growing list of threatened migratory species protected under CMS," Masha Vorontsova, director of the International Fund for Animal Welfare Russia, told The Guardian. "Appendix II does not mean that sufficient conservation action will be taken to protect the well-being of polar bears."

"What gives us hope is that this listing means that 120 countries are now recognizing the threats that polar bears face from the shrinking of their ice habitat to pollution and hunting," Vorontsova added. "This is an important first step, but it must not be the last if we wish to save the polar bear."

Perhaps the biggest winners in Ecuador were sharks -- 21 species of sharks, rays and sawfish were added to the UN's list of protected species. Sharks and whales can be particularly hard to protect as they migrate across large swaths of ocean, across international boundaries. New listings and agreements forged at the 120-nation conference will attempt to address such issues.

"That means where the species migrates, that all of those countries come up with a strategy, a strategic plan to be able to manage and conserve those species," Bradnee Chambers, the convention's executive secretary, told Bloomberg.

"For species like silky and thresher sharks, there's still time to save them, but the time for action is now," said Luke Warwick, a conservation advocate with Pew Charitable Trusts' shark conservation initiative. "The implementation of these listings will be key."

Other species that also saw their protection level strengthened are the extremely rare Cuvier's beaked-whale, Africa's red-fronted gazelle, and the great bustard, a bird found in Europe and Asia.


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