Saturday, April 19, 2008

Olive Ridleys - Victim to Commercial Fishing

Greenpeace India has done various campaigns to save the Indian seas. One campaign which has received wide popularity and concern has been the treat faced by the Olive Ridley Turtles in the coast of India (Orissa).





Olive Ridley Turtles
Bhubaneswar, Feb 1 - More than 8,000 endangered Olive Ridley turtles are said to have been killed over the past three months by mechanised trawlers along the Orissa coast in eastern India, home to the world's largest nesting site for turtles.
The state has a long coastline of over 480 km along the Bay of Bengal and sea turtles come ashore in several places for nesting in every winter. Around 700,000 to 800,000 Olive Ridley turtles visit Orissa's Gahirmatha beach, for nesting every year.

' In the past years, the clean sandy beaches of the state are littered with bleeding Olive Ridleys, as thousands of them have been washed ashore after being killed by mechanised fishing boats,' Biswajit Mohanty, coordinator of the turtle conservation group Operation Kachhapa, told IANS.
Mohanty has also said that 'Over the past three months, we conducted surveys from time to time and spotted large numbers of dead Olive Ridleys in Gahirmatha in Kendrapada district and at the Devi river mouth in Puri district.
'Besides these two places, we have also spotted dead turtles at the Jatadhar river mouth in Jagatsinghpur district, in the Harishpur area, Chilika coast and in Puri.’At least 8,354 Olive Ridley turtles have been found dead on the beaches and near the river mouthsAround 3,000 dead turtles were spotted in the Gahirmatha marine sanctuary alone, followed by the Dhamra river mouth with 2,000 dead turtles and around 1,154 at the Chilika river mouth.
However, state wildlife chief P.K. Patnaik said the number of dead turtles discovered along the coast in the past three months was just around 2,000.
'We have taken all measures to protect the turtles,' Patnaik told IANS. 'We have established at least 45 camps along the coastline comprising of local officials and local social activists to keep a watch on the movement of turtles and to protect them. Besides, we have also sought the help of police to stop the movement of mechanised trawlers near the nesting sites.
' But Mohanty said for the last three years, the state forest department has been concealing the exact figure of the turtle casualties for fear of public outcry over their inaction.
He said in the past 14 years, more than 130,000 turtles have been found dead on the Orissa coast, which has earned it the dubious title of being the 'World's Largest Turtle Graveyard'. Last year, around 9,000 turtles were found dead here.
'The turtle congregation is now breaking up and there is little chance of mass nesting at the Devi river mouth. Every day, hundreds of mating turtles are being slaughtered here.
'Though mechanised trawling is prohibited within a 20 km radius of the coastline, every day 20-30 trawlers could be seen here due to lack of enforcement.

' Endangered Olive Ridleys continue to be massacred in the state despite orders passed by the Central Empowered Committee of the Supreme Court in April 2004 to protect them.
Two new speedboats were bought by the state Fisheries Department with a grant of Rs.12 million provided by the government of India. However, they are lying idle at Paradweep port instead of being deployed for patrolling. It has been learnt that there are no trained boat drivers to run these boats.
No night patrolling is carried out though it was ordered by the committee. Also the law made it mandatory for trawlers to use Turtle Excluder Devices (TED), however, not a single trawler uses them.
On Jan 15, several dead Olive Ridley Turtles were found at Gundalba beach with injured heads and cut flippers.
The Rs.10 million given by the Indian Oil Corporation to the forest department in the year 2000 for turtle protection is yet to be used for fishing boats. The money has been utilised on field camps and buying useless equipment.
The department is yet to fill up the vacant posts of forest rangers in the Rajnagar Wildlife Division and the Puri Wildlife Division, which are in charge of patrolling in the Gahirmatha marine sanctuary and the Devi river mouth area.

Like tigers and elephants, the Olive Ridley sea turtle is protected by Schedule I of the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972. Trapping, killing or selling of this species could result in a maximum of seven years' imprisonment. But not a single person has been convicted in Orissa, though thousands of turtles are killed every year.

So one of the world`s most unique and treasured species are seen massacred by the millions of helpless and naked eyes and soon these species will be only be a name in the environmental history books until and unless some concrete steps are taken to save them from extinction.

Researched And Reported By Deven. M. Digwal.

2 comments:

preetha said...

I PERSONALLY APPRECIATE THE EFFORTS TAKEN BY THIS PERSON AS THERE'S LOT OF RESEARCH WORK DONE.AND ALSO IT SHOWS THE INDEPTH KNOWLEDGE THE PERSON HAS ABOUT MARINE LIFE AND TOPICS RELATED TO IT.
SUCH INFORMATION ALSO HELPS PEOPLE TO KNOW MORE ABOUT SUCH THINGS AND MOTIVATES THEM TO FIGHT FOR ANY WRONG DOING...HATS OF TO YOU DEVEN!KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK..HOPE YOU HAVE A VERY GOOD FUTURE!AND HOPE YOUR KNOWLEDGE TAKES YOU TO GREATER HORIZONS!GUDLUCK!

R said...

My, my, Dev! That's some research. And you have quite a debate going on in the post about the Tata port.

Rohini