logo
Coral-rich Greek archipelago hopes to gain from trawler ban

Coral-rich Greek archipelago hopes to gain from trawler ban

France 2403-06-2025
The modest catch nevertheless quickly drew several islanders in search of fresh fish, a rarity in past years in this island chain in the northeastern Aegean Sea, which has fewer than 1,500 inhabitants in total.
"Today, there were two of us heading out to sea, and we caught some fish by chance," said the 76-year-old fisherman, his skin deeply tanned by the Mediterranean sun.
"Yesterday, we earned 30 euros ($34). The day before yesterday, not a penny. Sometimes, we don't even have enough to eat," he told AFP.
But things could be looking up for this small corner of the Aegean Sea.
Last month, the Greek government banned bottom trawling in the waters around the archipelago, to protect a recent discovery of exceptionally rich coral reefs.
Greece is also outlawing bottom trawling in national marine parks by 2026 and in all protected marine areas by 2030, the first country in Europe to take such a step.
Fishing is generally allowed in protected marine areas worldwide, often even by trawlers, which scrape the seabed with a huge funnel-shaped net.
"Finally!" Mytikas exclaimed when told of the ban. "They've ravaged the sea. They plough the seabed and destroy everything."
At the island port, his colleague Vaggelis Markakis, 58, compared trawlers to "bulldozers".
"If we stop them from coming here, our sea will come back to life," Mytikas said. "The sea will be filled with fish again."
Research conducted in this archipelago by the conservation groups Under the Pole, which organises diving expeditions in extreme environments, and Archipelagos, in collaboration with European scientific institutions, has highlighted the existence of major underwater animal populations.
At depths between 60 and 150 meters (around 200 to 500 feet), scientists have documented over 300 species living on the seabed under minimal light.
'Underwater forests'
"What we discovered is beyond imagination -- vast coral reefs dating back thousands of years, still intact," gushed Anastasia Miliou, scientific director of Archipelagos.
The sea floor-dwelling species discovered include vibrantly red gorgonians (Paramuricea clavata) and black corals (Antipathella subpinnata).
"When these organisms occur at high densities, they form true underwater forests," said Lorenzo Bramanti, a researcher at the CNRS Laboratory of Ecogeochemistry of Benthic Environments.
But these habitats are extremely sensitive.
"A single trawl pass is enough to raze them," warned Stelios Katsanevakis, professor of oceanography at the University of the Aegean.
And the damage can be potentially irreversible, added Bramanti.
"Once destroyed, these forests may take decades or even centuries to recover," said the marine scientist, who has worked on corals in the Mediterranean, Caribbean and Pacific.
"No one doubts that cutting down a forest is an ecological disaster. The same is true for animal forests," Bramanti said.
Setting an example
By banning bottom trawling around Fournoi, Bramanti hopes Greece will set an example for other Mediterranean countries, he said.
"We must act quickly, because these are among the last ecosystems still untouched by climate change," given that they are located at depths greater than 70 meters, he said.
"And we risk losing them before we even truly understand them."
But the measure has left industrial fishing professionals fuming.
There are around 220 bottom trawlers in Greece, and sector representatives complain restrictions on their activity are excessive.
"We were not invited to any kind of discussion on this matter," said Kostas Daoultzis, head of the trawler cooperative at the northern port of Nea Michaniona, one of the country's main fish markets.
Daoultzis said the decisions were "based on reports from volunteer organisations... lacking scientific backing".
He said trawlers already avoid coral areas, which can damage their equipment.
Fournoi fishermen counter that trawlers do fish in their waters, but turn off their tracking systems to avoid detection.
Under pressure globally, trawling is likely to be on the agenda at a United Nations Ocean Conference next week in the French city of Nice.
Daoultzis said he fears for the survival of his profession.
"Our fishing spaces keep shrinking. Our activity is under threat, and consumers will suffer -- fish prices will skyrocket," he warned.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Great Barrier Reef suffers most widespread bleaching on record
Great Barrier Reef suffers most widespread bleaching on record

France 24

time13 minutes ago

  • France 24

Great Barrier Reef suffers most widespread bleaching on record

Scientists documented the "most spatially extensive" bleaching since records began almost 40 years ago, driven by sweltering ocean temperatures in 2024 that triggered "unprecedented levels of heat stress". The Australian Institute of Marine Science surveyed the health of 124 coral reefs between August 2024 and May 2025. Northern and southern branches of the sprawling reef had seen the "largest annual decline in coral cover" ever recorded, the government agency found. Reefs had been battered by tropical cyclones and infestations of crown-of-thorns starfish that feast on coral. But the "number one cause is climate change," said the institute's research lead Mike Emslie. "There is no doubt about that," he told AFP. Often dubbed the world's largest living structure, the Great Barrier Reef is a 2,300 kilometre (1,400-mile) expanse of tropical corals that houses a stunning array of biodiversity. But repeated bleaching events have threatened to rob the tourist drawcard of its wonder, turning banks of once-vibrant coral a sickly white. Unusually warm tropical waters triggered widespread coral bleaching on the Great Barrier Reef in 2024 and in the first few months of 2025 -- the sixth such event in the past nine years. "The (Great Barrier Reef) experienced unprecedented levels of heat stress, which caused the most spatially extensive and severe bleaching recorded to date," the report found. Over the past two years a mass global bleaching event has drained the life from more than 80 percent of the world's coral reefs. Bleaching occurs when water temperatures rise forcing coral to expel the colourful microscopic algae, known as zooxanthellae, embedded in their tissues. If high temperatures persist, the coral can eventually turn white and die. Emslie said past coral growth would help cushion the record losses and that the Great Barrier Reef was still an "amazing place". 'Worth fighting for' "It is still worth fighting for. We can't throw our arms up and give up," he said. The report found a rapidly growing type of coral -- known as acropora -- had suffered the most. This coral is quick to grow, but is also one of the first to bleach. The report found that any recovery of the reef could take years and was dependent on future coral reproduction and minimal environmental disturbance. Richard Leck from the World Wildlife Fund compared the fluctuating health of the Great Barrier Reef to a "rollercoaster". "That is a sign of an ecosystem under incredible stress and what reef scientists are hugely concerned about is when the reef does not keep bouncing back the way it has," he told AFP. Leck said some coral reefs around the world were already beyond recovery, warning the Great Barrier Reef could suffer the same fate without ambitious and rapid climate action. The average sea surface temperature around Australia was the "highest on record" in 2024, according to Australian National University. Australia is currently developing its next round of emissions reduction targets, a key obligation under the landmark Paris climate agreement.

Rwanda bees being wiped out by pesticides
Rwanda bees being wiped out by pesticides

France 24

timea day ago

  • France 24

Rwanda bees being wiped out by pesticides

Joseph Ruzigana, of Muhanga district in southern Rwanda, woke up one morning to find all the bees in his 20 newly constructed beehives had died. "Fellow beekeepers have also lost plenty of bees to these dangerous pesticides. It looks like we won't get any honey this season," he told AFP. Ruzigana said many beekeepers, who number more than 100,000 in Rwanda according to officials, were giving up. "The few bees left are very weak and unproductive... I used to get up to 25 kilogrammes (55 pounds) of honey from one beehive in a month-long season, my family was well taken care of, but all that has collapsed," he said. Changing climate conditions are part of the problem: longer rains this season were not favourable to beekeeping. But the main issue is pesticides, say locals and experts. Bees pollinate crops including coffee, tea, avocados, mangoes, beans and tomatoes -- making them key to an agricultural sector that accounts for 30 percent of GDP and 70 percent of employment in Rwanda. It is the same across the region. Uganda, Ethiopia, Tanzania and Kenya have all reported increasing bee mortality rates due to pesticides, according to the International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology in Nairobi. Hazardous pesticides Rwanda is a poor and landlocked country striving to feed its people through improved maize and rice cultivation, and pesticides help control pests like armyworms. But many pesticides affect bees' navigation and reproduction, and have been linked to colony collapse disorder, when worker bees abandon a hive. Rwanda grows large amounts of pyrethrum, a flower that could be used to make a natural pesticide, but exports all its pyrethrum liquid. Instead, Rwandan farmers use imported synthetic pesticides. A 2022 study by Turkey's Ondokuz Mayis University found that 72 percent used Rocket, containing profenofos, which is highly toxic to bees. Jeanne Nyirandahimana, part of a women's beekeeping cooperative, said average earnings have fallen from around 250,000 Rwandan francs ($178) per season to around 30,000 ($21). "It is pesticides like Rocket killing our bees, every day we find many bees dead on roofs and some die in beehives," she said. An earlier study by the University of Rwanda found that 22 percent of farmers around Lake Kivu used malathion, also deadly to bees. Despite being banned for use in the EU, malathion is still exported by Denmark, France and Germany -- 12.5 tonnes in 2023, according to the European Chemicals Agency. 'Critical importance' Jean Claude Izamuhaye, head of crop production at the Rwanda Agricultural Board, said the body was working on the problem. "They are our natural pollinators, and it is of critical importance that bees are saved," he said, adding that the board was looking into increasing the use of less harmful "bio-pesticides". The continued sale of toxic pesticides by EU companies can also mean they end up in the food that is sold back to Europe. A study released this month by Foodwatch, an advocacy group, found that more than half the food imported into the EU from Rwanda contained traces of "highly hazardous" pesticides that are banned in Europe. EU countries sold 81,615 tonnes of 41 banned pesticides to other countries for agricultural use in 2022, according to the Pesticide Action Network.

Clip shows 2021 eruption of Fagradalsfjall in Iceland, not Russian volcano
Clip shows 2021 eruption of Fagradalsfjall in Iceland, not Russian volcano

AFP

time2 days ago

  • AFP

Clip shows 2021 eruption of Fagradalsfjall in Iceland, not Russian volcano

"The Klyuchevskoy volcano in Russia is starting to erupt," reads a Malay-language TikTok post shared on July 31, 2025. The accompanying video of lava bubbling up and overflowing from a crater has been viewed more than 33,000 times. Image Screenshot of the false TikTok post captured on July 31, 2025, with a red X added by AFP The same video was shared alongside a similar claim on TikTok and Facebook after Russia's Geophysical Survey said the Klyuchevskoy volcano -- the highest active in Europe and Asia -- erupted on July 30, with lava seen flowing down its slopes (archived link). Earlier that day, an 8.8-magnitude earthquake struck Russia's far eastern Kamchatka region, triggering tsunami alerts across parts of the Pacific coast (archived link). The circulating video, however, shows an eruption at a different volcano four years earlier. A reverse image search on Google using keyframes from the falsely shared clip led to similar footage posted on Facebook in November 2024, where it was captioned, "Boiling infernal lava pond in the crater pit of an Icelandic volcano" (archived link). The post embeds an earlier post from June 2021, and credits the video to a Bjorn Steinbekk. Image Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared clip (left) and the earlier Facebook posts (right) A subsequent keyword search for "Bjorn Steinbekk" on Google led to the Instagram account of an Icelandic photographer with the same name who specialises in taking drone videos and images of volcanoes (archived link). The same video was also shared on the Instagram account on May 22, 2021 (archived link). Image Screenshot of the falsely shared clip (left) and the video posted by Bjorn Steinbekk on Instagram (right) Steinbekk told AFP he filmed the video used in the false posts at the Fagradalsfjall volcano near Iceland's capital Reykjavik, in 2021 (archived link). "This is indeed my video. This is not the first or tenth time this happens," Steinbekk said in a July 31 email. The Fagradalsfjall volcano erupted in March 2021 after lying dormant for 800 years, NASA's Earth Observatory said at the time (archived link). AFP reported that the volcanic eruption, which drew hundreds of thousands of tourists and was the longest in 50 years, was officially declared over by authorities on December 20, 2021 (archived link). AFP has also debunked other misinformation that has swirled online since the 8.8-magnitude earthquake in Russia's Far East.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store