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Late-night beach find highlights sad reality of Aussie state's $88 million pledge
Late-night beach find highlights sad reality of Aussie state's $88 million pledge

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Late-night beach find highlights sad reality of Aussie state's $88 million pledge

While most Aussies were sitting down to dinner, watching TV on the couch, or out grabbing a beer at the pub, a small group of beachgoers was waist-deep in water to start the weekend. They were crowded around a manta ray, a large protected species of fish that visitors flock to Queensland's warm waters to photograph. But what occurred in the popular tourism town of Noosa on Friday night isn't something you'll see in holiday brochures. This manta ray had rope and chain wrapped around it, and a hook deep in its mouth. Scratches around its body, and bites from tiny fish around its mouth and long lobes it uses for communication, indicate it had been unable to move for a long time. When wildlife rescuer William Watson arrived at the beach, his first thought was that the fish was wrapped in a boat's anchor. He worked with a group of locals for more than an hour to try and cut it free. 'He was very tired and very weak. He must have been thrashing and got himself twisted around,' the Wildlife Noosa founder told Yahoo News. 'He had a hook through the side of his mouth, I had to pull it out backwards, because you couldn't cut it.' As the creature slowly swam away, he began to process what had happened. The equipment that had caught the manta ray wasn't from an anchor. It appeared to have been deliberately set. The chain and hook looked to be part of a drumline, a type of baited hook placed strategically around the coast by the state government. The purpose of these devices is to catch seven target species of shark and make beachgoers feel safe, which is important given the tourism industry has an estimated value of $33 billion a year. Related: Queensland bureaucrats accused of 'sanitising' bloody act against shark However, Friday's incident highlights that more often than not, it's not just sharks that are being snared in drumlines and nets, but also protected species like manta rays, endangered sea turtles, and dolphins. Documentarian and Envoy Foundation director Andre Borell told Yahoo News the problem could potentially get worse, with the Crisafulli government announcing last week it would be expanding upon a decades-old shark control program with an $88 million investment, a plan it linked to "upholding Queensland's international tourism reputation". 'It's anti-science. Lethal methods don't make beaches any safer… They're proclaiming it as a great step forward, but in reality, they're investing in something that doesn't work,' he claimed to Yahoo News. His concerns mirror those of the RSPCA, which responded to the Crisafulli Government announcement by joining the Nets Out Now coalition and warning nets create a 'false sense of security' among beachgoers. 'These devices are not physical barriers. Sharks can swim around or beneath them, and yet they continue to kill marine life indiscriminately, including protected species that pose no threat to humans,' its head of policy Rachel Woodrow said. Both also raised concerns about the legality of the expansion of the program, which in its current state has an exemption from the Commonwealth's threatened species protection laws, the EPBC. Queensland's government has claimed shark controls like drumlines and nets 'likely' lessen the chances of attacks. Its primary industries minister, Tony Perrett, said the planned expansion of the program was 'big and bold'. 'It puts swimmer safety first, and it's the largest overhaul of funds this program has seen in over 60 years," he said. Responding to questions about Queensland's shark control program and bycatch of animals like manta rays, Perrett told Yahoo the government will "prioritise the safety of people above all else." Referring to a report by international audit group KPMG, he said nets and drumlines are "still the most effective way of protecting swimmers". 'Until the new technology is scientifically proven as effective at protecting beach goers as traditional methods, we will continue to invest in what keeps Queenslanders and our beaches safe," he said in a statement. The expansion of the shark control program will see nets installed at up to seven new locations, and they'll be checked every day, which the department of primary industries claims will improve swimmer safety and lessen bycatch. With some of the money being directed to research, education and innovation, and the doubling of drone surveillance from 10 to 20 locations, the department said the plan "strikes a balance" between lethal and non-lethal methods. Looking generally at shark control in Australia, there is evidence that attacks are less likely at netted beaches. However critics argue that's because the same stretches are patrolled by lifeguards. Queensland's tourism industry is already under pressure, with a major drawcard, the Great Barrier Reef severely degraded due to mass bleaching and extreme weather linked to climate change. Borell believes the shark control program will damage other ecosystems that draw holidaymakers to the Sunshine State. 'Manta rays, dolphins, whales, turtles, everything you can picture on a tourism poster for Queensland, we're catching and killing it in the shark control program,' he said. Anger erupts as tourist site 'totally destroyed' in violent act Young Aussie's fears over ancient sites under threat from controversial plan Excited tourists watch 'nature documentary' unfold as predator hunts While shark nets cover just 0.03 per cent of Queensland's coast, because they are placed in populated areas, their impact on protected wildlife is routinely observed. So with whales now migrating towards Queensland's warmer waters from Antarctica, it's almost certain they'll soon be seen entangled in the nets. While NSW removes its shark nets during the winter migration, Queensland keeps them in place, and mothers and their inexperienced calves are regularly caught — an average of six per year. And that's something that keeps Watson and his Noosa Wildlife rescue volunteers up at night. 'Everyone's got anxiety over them. It's horrible. I'd love to be waiting for the whales to be coming in, rather than thinking, please don't,' he said. In Queensland, it is illegal for members of the public to remove drum lines or shark nets. Love Australia's weird and wonderful environment? 🐊🦘😳 Get our new newsletter showcasing the week's best stories.

Aussies warned after 'cruel' discovery sparks 900km outback journey
Aussies warned after 'cruel' discovery sparks 900km outback journey

Yahoo

time11-03-2025

  • Yahoo

Aussies warned after 'cruel' discovery sparks 900km outback journey

Aussies are being warned to stop using illegal fishing hooks and to make sure they don't leave any fishing equipment in the environment after a turtle no larger than a dinner plate was left fighting for its life after ingesting a hook. The concerning discovery even led to a near 900-kilometre round-trip journey and a delicate surgery to have it removed. The turtle swallowed the fishing hook near the coastal city of Geraldton in WA's Mid West region and was found in early January in the Chapman River, with the hook attached to a fish trap. After unsuccessful attempts to remove the hook were made by local wildlife rescuers, the turtle was driven to a specialist wildlife hospital in Perth — some 450 kilometres south of where it was first discovered. A surgery using a small endoscope finally removed the fishing gear from inside the small animal. "To leave a trap, to intentionally trap an animal and potentially kill it because you're not going out there to check those traps, is bloody cruel," Geraldton local Michele Walters told the ABC. It was her daughter who found the injured turtle. The dinner-plate turtle has now been released back into the Chapman River and expected to make a full recovery. Yahoo News has reported on a long list of incidents when fishing equipment caused serious injury to wildlife, including a young kookaburra who was found with a fishing lure pierced through its mouth, a seabird with a hook stuck in its neck and wing, and a 50-kilogram sea turtle with fishing hooks pierced through its intestines. 🎣 Photographer 'disgusted' by sad find at Aussie fishing spot 🏞️ Desperate plea after woman's 'legendary' act on riverbank 🐠 Fisherman's 'thoughtless' act at tourist hotspot Wildlife rescuers continue to be inundated with incidents involving fishing equipment, saying it's an issue plaguing coastal towns across the country. "Fishing line entanglement is massive in the oceans and rivers... A lot of wildlife drown from fishing lines and hooks because it gets caught up and they can't get out of the water," rescuer William Watson previously told Yahoo News after wading in a neck-high river to rescue an ibis tangled in a fishing line. After the ibis incident, WIRES echoed Watson's sentiment and said fishing lines and hooks are "a really big problem" and "the big message is to please, if there aren't any council bins for disposal, take it home and dispose of it there". Do you have a story tip? Email: newsroomau@ You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter and YouTube.

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