30/01/2006
- Rome, Italy –Three ecologically-important deep sea areas
have been protected off the waters of Italy, Cyprus and
Egypt, following a recent decision by the General Fisheries
Commission for the Mediterranean (GFCM). The decision —
a result of a WWF-led effort to support sustainable fisheries
— legally requires all Mediterranean states to prevent bottom
trawling fishing fleets from operating in the designated
areas.
Bottom trawling is the primary threat to deep sea environments,
due to the destructive nature of the technique. The nets
completely destroy bottom habitats like cold-water coral
reefs — some of which are thousands of years old — in a
single trawl. The GFCM banned bottom trawling at depths
beyond 1000m in February 2005.
Ongoing work by WWF, IUCN-The World Conservation Union,
and the scientific community have highlighted the diversity,
importance and need for protection of Mediterranean deep-sea
ecosystems, and provided data and reports which have led
to their protection at the most recent meeting of the GFCM.
“This is a major recognition for WWF and the scientific
community who have been asking for a protection status of
crucial deep seas areas in the Mediterranean,” said Sergi
Tudela, Head of WWF-Mediterranean’s fisheries programme.
“We welcome this commitment to responsible fisheries and
the ecosystem.”
The three designated protected areas include the deepwater
coral reef off Capo Santa Maria di Leuca, Italy, in the
Ionian Sea, which is home to the rare white coral, Lophelia,
as well as a Chemosynthesis-based ecosystem (an ecosystem
that does not depend on the sun as a source of energy) offshore
from the Nile Delta, and the spectacular Eratosthenes seamount,
south of Cyprus, which hosts rare coral species.
“Deep water coral reefs are known to be important habitats
for commercial species such as shrimps and congers,” said
Tudela. “Protection of the ecosystems will benefit both
biodiversity and fishing communities.”
The protection of the deep water coral reef off Capo Santa
Maria di Leuca was achieved with the active support of an
Italian fisherman association, AGCI Pesca.
“Declaring protection status is an important achievement
for these unique areas and we hope that the GFCM will continue
to support sustainable fisheries by declaring new protected
sites in the very near future,” Tudela added.
“Trawling fleets are known to have destroyed similar deep
sea ecosystems in Northern Atlantic waters. We must not
let this happen in the Mediterranean.”
END NOTES:
• The General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean
(GFCM) is a subsidiary body of UN Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO). |