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Over the past week, more than a 100 Olive Ridley turtles have washed up dead on the beaches of Chennai, and many more are believed to be floating dead on Bay of Bengal.
The endangered Oliver Ridley turtles, well-known for their coordinated nesting in large numbers, generally make their annual trip up the Bay of Bengal during the breeding months of December and January. However, the use of trawlers and gill nets have historically resulted in sweeping up these sea turtles and drowning them. They are also increasingly consuming plastic waste in the ocean.
Trawling is method of fishing that involves actively dragging or pulling fishing nets through the water. In September 2016, the Tamil Nadu government announced the “prohibition of fishing by any kind of fishing vessels in a radius of five nautical miles [approximately nine km] around potential nesting and breeding sites of sea turtles in the coastal areas under Tamil Nadu Marine Fishing Regulation Act 1983.”
Speaking to TNM, Supraja Dharini of the Tree Foundation that works to protect the marine turtle population says:
Gillnets are more effective in catching fishes.
Speaking to TNM, Arun, a coordinator for the Students Sea Turtle Conservation Network, said, “Gillnets drop straight down. They extend up to 3 or 4 kilometres. And the turtles that come to nest get caught in that. There have been reports of 30 turtles caught in a single net. The gill nets and trawlers together are responsible for this.”
In 2015, turtle conservationists conducted trials with ten fishermen for the use of Turtle Excluder Devices (TED).
Supraja says, “The court had asked the Fisheries Department to implement the use of Turtle Excluder Device. But nothing happened. Fishermen are going as usual for fishing.”
“To my knowledge, nobody in India is using TED. The research institute designed the TED. It’s a small apparatus that has to be attached to the net. They have only conducted trials. The fishermen have rejected it at the trial stage itself because the escaping percentage is higher (than regular catch). The researchers and officials are in the process to reduce the percentage of escape.”
Both Arun and Supraja lay much of the blame for dying turtles at the doorstep of the fisheries department.
Supraja who has working to help educate fisherfolk communities to be aware of the effects of trawler use on turtles, asks, “Since 2015, we’ve been working with the Indian Coast Guard, Marine Department, Forest Department and Fisheries Department. We are trying to network with them and get them to work together for better enforcement. Fisheries department says they don’t have any facilities to go in the ocean. When the marine police apprehend anybody who is violating, they have to hand them over to the fisheries department.”
While the entire nesting season last year saw the death of over 200 hundred turtles, this year the number is 100 within the first few weeks.
“There should be a strong rule that when anybody is seen violating the fisheries regulation act, the fisheries department should just cancel their license of the trawl boat. If they cancel the license and stop giving them the subsidy, then they will be frightened and they will not violate the law. If there’s no penalty, they won’t bother,” says Supraja.
(This story was originally published on The News Minute, and has been republished with permission.)
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