hectors
 
Around the world today there are many species threatened with extinction.  Frogs, bats, sharks, parrots, tigers, owls, rhinos, and dolphins are struggling to survive on the fringes of a human world.  It would be unfair to argue that any of these species is inherently more valuable than another.  However being a New Zealander, and a freediver with a natural admiration of dolphins, I've been trying to make a difference for the Maui's and Hector's Dolphins, the world's smallest and most endangered dolphin species.

To be honest, if you were to choose a species to try and save then this has to be the easiest pick, for a variety of reasons:

1. Appealing nature
They are cutely sized, beautifully marked and intelligent creatures, and they are mammals like us.  It's a species that we feel a natural affinity towards, and therefore naturally want to protect.

2.
We're 'green', right?
They live in a country that depends heavily on a reputation of being 'green' and eco-friendly.  An extinction of such a species would do to that reputation  and the tourism industry built on it what Moby Dick did to the Pequod.

3. We can afford it
New Zealand isn't a third-world country, and so protective policies should be easy to enforce (compare to African nations where poverty compels poachers to hunt species to their extinction).

4. Decades of research
There has been more peer-reviewed research on the Maui's and Hector's range, habits, lifespan and population decline than almost any other species of dolphin.  This has been conducted over a period of 20 years, so there is no need to wait for further research or appraisal.

5. Easily fixable
There is only one major threat factor to their population: by-catch from net fishing.  Unlike some of the pressures that threaten other species, this one is very easy to isolate and eliminate (compare to the Polar Bear whose salvation may depend on the reversal of global warming).

6. The Law says "We can!"
There is legislature in place within New Zealand's constitution that allows for immediate protection through the use of emergency powers afforded to the Minster of Conservation.


And yet, and yet … Despite all this, despite tens of thousands of petition signatures, individually written letters to the ministers and prime minister, despite the schoolchildrens' handwritten poems and carefully-coloured dolphin pictures, despite dozens of damning international press articles, all efforts and results for which I am sure the readers of this blog have played a large part… despite all this, Hector's and Maui's dolphins are no more protected than they were five months ago.

Why? 
New Zealand's government is contemptuously playing a waiting game. They are waiting for the outcry over a spate of net-scarred dolphin carcasses that washed up on the beaches last summer to die down. They are waiting for the furor over the latest Maui's population estimate - lower than anyone possibly feared - to subside.  They are an entropic government, waiting for entropy to have its way.

And meanwhile, while they waver and defer, while they shelve and consult, in the winter seas of New Zealand's west coast a population of now less than 55 animals, who represent the entirety of their species, swims every day in a territory that overlaps with the unscrupulous set nets and trawlers that have brought their number to the verge of annihilation.


I know I'm not alone in saying that I will not wait or be content until they are protected and their numbers begin to increase.  In the second half of this year, several documentaries and features including one with CBS's 60 Minutes, the most viewed and respected television journalism program worldwide, will air, telling parts of my story and showing the world the dark side of NZ's shameful treatment of these dolphins.  By exposing the truth and threatening the multi-billion dollar business of tourism and fisheries, perhaps we can finally convince the NZ lawmakers into making the right decision.
 


Comments

Anna Maria Darousou
06/25/2012 10:52pm

Dolphins have always been like close family to me and i am thankful to you for trying to protect them. I hope and i wish we will finally succeed to save them. Bless you William :)) <3

Reply
04/29/2013 12:14pm

This is a great inspiring Article.I am pretty much pleased with your good Work.You put really very helpful information ..

Reply
05/20/2013 12:00am

Blogs require little technical skills to operate and if you do have questions normally your hosting services will have the answers.

09/17/2012 12:28am

i like this blog……….thank u!!

Reply
01/03/2013 10:02pm

I am impressed from the article of this Team about new plain. They are doing good job for people. I like it. Keep it up

Reply
01/03/2013 10:03pm

Thanks for sharing this information. I always search new and different blogs and your article is mind catching.

11/23/2012 7:49pm

Great post.Thanks for sharing this

Reply
04/09/2013 2:26am

They are amazing..and very friendly.I wish they don't get extinct in some days.Save them!

Reply
12/02/2012 8:48pm

Excellent website along with a excellent subject too

Reply

I don’t think it is a new to the humanity; most of the species are threatened with extinction. The main reason for their extinction is men’s interfere in to their lives. The society is going to know about the negative side of it very soon.

Reply
03/10/2013 1:52am

This is a really good read for me, Must admit that you are one of the best bloggers I ever saw.Thanks for posting this informative article.

Reply


Hi, after reading this amazing piece of writing i am too glad to share my experience here with colleagues.

Reply

The most important thing that a student should bare in his mind is to not turn their backs on the people who made all; things possible for them especially their professors.

Reply
05/19/2013 12:43am

I’d should confirm with you here. Which isn’t one thing I usually do! I take pleasure in learning a article that may help to make people think. In addition, thanks for permitting me to comment!

Reply



Leave a Reply

     
    William Trubridge
    William Trubridge is a worldclass athlete with true depth. He has 15 freedive world records to his name and is not only the current freedive world champion but our dedicated Hector's and Maui's Dolphins Ambassador.

    Watch William's amazing underwater dolphin appeal
    Picture
    CLICK image to open

     
    Picture
    CLICK to download the flier

    Watch William Breathe
    Check out 9-time Emmy Award-winning ESPN producer Martin Khodabakhshian's fascinating freedive documentary 'Breathe'. The film follows William as he attempts to break his own world record by diving completely unaided to a depth of 300ft.

    Picture
    CLICK image to open


    Find out more about Will at Vertcalblue

    Archives

    October 2012
    June 2012
    April 2012
    March 2012


    Categories

    All