Fishing at Oracabessa, JamaicaGovernmental and non-governmental organisations in Jamaica have signed an agreement on the establishment of no-fish zones for protection of fish stocks and marine resources:

The Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries and seven state and non-governmental bodies signed an agreement last Thursday for the management and protection of the country’s marine resources. The agreement institutes a ban on fishing in some coastal communities.

Under the new partnership, the ministry will invest $23 million in the sanctuaries up to the end of this fiscal year.

In return, community-based groups and environmental watchdogs will monitor the nine fish sanctuaries, which will be designated no-fishing zones for the protection of juvenile fish.

The seven parties signing the memorandum of understanding with the ministry were Alloa Fishermen Cooperative Limited, Bluefield’s Bay Fishermen’s Friendly Society, the Caribbean Coastal Area Management Foundation, the Montego Bay Marine Park Trust, the Oracabessa Foundation, the Negril Environment Protection Trust, and the Sandals Foundation.

The nine fish sanctuaries are located at Orange Bay, Hanover; Bluefields Bay in Westmoreland; Galleon in St Elizabeth; Salt Harbour in Clarendon; parts of Galleon Harbour and the Three Bays area in Old Harbour, St Catherine; Montego Bay Marine Park, St James; Discovery Bay, St Ann; and Oracabessa Bay, St Mary.

Agriculture Minister Christopher Tufton said at the signing of the agreement that successive administrations had failed to protect Jamaica’s marine resources even while coral reef fish stock continued to decline. The more than 3,000 fishers in the sanctuary areas have been approached and asked to cooperate with the ban.

The sanctuaries cover more than 5,000 hectares of protected space “that will allow our fish stock to expand freely without the threat of any one”, the minister said.

Get more information from the Jamaica Gleaner.

Previously on Green Antilles: Fishery reserves in Jamaica: the case of Pedro Bank.

[Photo: Jerry Edmundson]

Tags:

No comments yet.

Leave a Reply

Video: Invasive Alien Species of the Bahamas

Video: Invasive Alien Species of the Bahamas

Learn why invasive plant and animal species such as the Australian Pine, the Lionfish, the Melaleuca Tree and the Brazilian Pepper Tree are bad for the Bahamian environment.

Reducing deforestation in Haiti with new cooking stoves and tree nurseries

IICA distributes environmentally-friendly stoves in Haiti

The Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA) is contributing to a project that takes a two-pronged approach to reducing [...]

Small Island Developing States Ministers meet to prepare for Rio+20

Ministers from small island developing states (SIDS) recently met informally to discuss sustainable energy development and their negotiating positions in [...]

Caribbean Endemic Bird Festival 2012

Caribbean Endemic Bird Festival 2012

The 2012 Caribbean Endemic Bird Festival runs from April 22 to May 22.

Video: Climate change in Dominica

Via the Climate Investment Funds: The landscape of Dominica has changed. Its pristine biodiversity now faces a multitude of threats [...]

Six Caribbean countries to receive US$10.6 million for climate resilience activities

The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) reports that Caribbean countries are to benefit from a $10.6 million grant from the Climate [...]