Dolphins to desert dying British seas
Jonathan Leake, Environment Editor
Sunday Times 17th Sept
http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/
DOLPHINS and porpoises could soon disappear from the seas around Britain, driven away by overfishing and pollution, says a report out this week.
It predicts that large parts of the English Channel could become a dead sea, and re-veals that fish in the Irish and North Seas have been devastated, with birds, shellfish and many plankton species also threatened.
The report, for the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF), studied 10 key species, including dolphins, porpoises, cod, salmon and oysters. It also looked at coastal habitats, including mudflats, rocky reefs and salt marshes.
It concludes that two-thirds of the species fished for food are overexploited, and that without tougher controls on fishermen and industry some will disappear.
The WWF said: "Cod has been fished unsustainably for years. It is threatened with commercial extinction."
However, figures from the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food reveal that fishermen are stripping more life from the sea than ever, taking 772,000 tons of fish and shellfish last year, up from 600,000 in 1990.
The ministry says the en-dangered species include cod, monkfish and nephrops, otherwise known as scampi.
The decline of dolphins and porpoises is perhaps the most obvious sign of damage. Populations of bottlenose dolphins around Britain were stable until they recently suddenly started falling. Destruction of their food supplies through overfishing is a big factor, but many also drown after being caught in nets.
The effect of pollution is also severe. Scientists said a baby bottlenose dolphin washed ashore in Cardigan Bay was one of the most polluted animals ever found.
Inland, wild salmon are disappearing from many British rivers largely because of fish farming, the report warns.
The WWF wants changes in legislation to halt the damage and give threatened species a way of recovering. These include turning some of the waters around Britain into protected areas where fishing and other commercial activities are banned, and an oceans act to protect the coast, seas and sea bed.