Media Release Save Our Sharks

VIDEO: Shocking images show endangered shark species culled by QLD Government in the Great Barrier Reef

September 4, 2018

Humane Society International and the Australian Marine Conservation Society (AMCS) today release shocking new footage and photographs of the heartbreaking cost of Queensland’s Shark Control Program in the Great Barrier Reef.

The images were obtained this month at drumlines set off the coast of Magnetic Island in the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park. Pictured are two scalloped hammerheads (Sphyrna lewini), IUCN Red listed as Endangered.  They were found dead on the line. Both organisations stand united in recrimination of the QLD Government’s approach to shark control, and its use of out-dated, cruel and ineffective measures, and call for an end to the use of lethal drumlines in the World Heritage-listed Great Barrier Reef.

“Lethal drumlines are an old and ineffective method of bather protection.  They catch and kill hundreds of non-target marine animals in the Great Barrier Reef, as these new shocking images show.  Our sharks and our Reef deserve so much better than this. Lethal drumlines provide nothing more than a completely false sense of security, at the expense of the lives of threatened species that are crucial to our Great Barrier Reef ecosystem,” said Nicola Beynon, Head of Campaigns at Humane Society International.

“This footage highlights the outdated and myopic attitudes towards sharks by successive Queensland Governments. They have been using the same, ineffective, lethal methods since the 1960s. It is past time for a change in our views of sharks and a change in policy to reflect that,” said Tooni Mahto, Fisheries and Threatened Species Campaign Manager at Australian Marine Conservation Society.

According to QLD Shark Control Program statistics, 10,480 sharks have been caught on lethal drumlines since 2001. Most of these sharks were harmless, and this number does not take account of the significant numbers of rays, turtles, fish and dolphins that are also caught and killed on drumlines in Queensland.

Humane Society International is currently engaged in legal action against the QLD Government and the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority for shark culling on lethal drumlines within the World Heritage-listed reef. Represented by Environmental Defenders Office (EDO NSW), Humane Society International is arguing that the Shark Control Program, which allows 173 lethal drumlines to operate within the Great Barrier Reef, is inconsistent with the main objective of the Marine Park, which is “to provide for the long term protection and conservation of the environment, biodiversity and heritage values of the Great Barrier Reef Region.” The killing of sharks, both target and non-target, contributes to the deterioration of the ecological stability of the reef, and it needs to end.

Since launching the legal challenge, the Queensland Government has removed seven of the 26 species of shark from its target list. Whilst the seven species of shark will no longer be shot dead if found alive on a drumline, they can still be hooked and die whilst the 173 lethal drumlines are installed in the Great Barrier Reef.

Humane Society International’s case against the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority and the Queensland Government will be heard in the Administrative Appeals Tribunal from Wednesday, 30 January 2019.

CONTACT

For interviews with Nicola Beynon, Head of Campaigns at Humane Society International, and to obtain video footage please contact: 
Benjamin Vozzo, Humane Society International Communications Coordinator
 – 0450 258 057 or (02) 9973 1728

For interviews with Tooni Mahto, Fisheries and Threatened Species Campaign Manager at Australian Marine Conservation Society, and to obtain video footage please contact:
Shane Cucow, Australian Marine Conservation Society Senior Digital Strategist – 0423 544 979