 | | Photo Doug Perrine SeaPics.com |
Thanks
to the diligent support of STRP members and the persistent work by STRP
staff and allies, in 2009 an emergency closure of the Bottom Longline
fishery in the Gulf of Mexico was ordered by NMFS to protect imperiled
sea turtles from capture and death in the fishery. This time without
longline vessels cutting through loggerhead habitat likely saved
hundreds of sea turtles from harmful encounters, much needed time “off
the hook”.
The closure resulted when NMFS’ own data indicated
the fishery had captured more than 9 times the number of sea turtles
authorized previously by NMFS in its 2005 Biological Opinion, when at
least 782 loggerheads were captured and 85 incidental takes were
allowed.
During the closure, NMFS completed another
Biological Opinion and then reopened the fishery in October 2009,
allowing over 1,000 loggerhead encounters over the next 3 years, over
600 of which are expected to be lethal.
In response to the new
regulations, STRP and allies have filed suit to challenge the agency’s
new Biological Opinion as unlawful and incomplete. The incomplete
science behind the agency's decision to reopen the fishery and allow
hundreds of rapidly declining loggerhead sea turtles to be captured and
killed in the longline fishery comes at a time when STRPs’ petition to
uplist Atlantic loggerheads from threatened to endangered status under
the ESA is in review, and when this season Florida nesting beaches
reported the fourth lowest number of returning loggerheads on record.
Loggerheads need greater protections to survive and recover, and NMFS
is responsible for protecting sea turtles under federal law.
"We
simply cannot risk losing more sea turtles to bottom longline fishing,
which has shown no regard for protected species," said Carole Allen,
Gulf of Mexico office director of the Turtle Island Restoration
Network/HEART (Help Save Endangered Animals - Ridley Turtles). "We’ve
worked too hard to protect sea turtles in the Gulf from fisheries to
have them pushed farther towards extinction by Florida longliners."
This
year, thousands of STRP members called for the permanent closure of the
fishery, given that hundreds of rare and endangered sea turtles are
caught and killed every year by bottom longlines in the Gulf of Mexico,
impeding the recovery of declining populations. Detailed comments were
submitted by STRP and allies denouncing the weak sea turtle
protections, and our lawsuits against the re-opening of this deadly
fishery are still pending.
We will continue pressure and
consistent focus on the scientific evidence for stronger protections in
our fight to keep Gulf of Mexico loggerhead sea turtles “off the hook.”
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