Whales, dolphins and porpoises (cetaceans) migrate
over large distances, connecting ocean ecosystems
and cultures throughout the Pacific Islands Region.
During the last century, many larger whale species
became endangered due to commercial whaling.
Although currently protected by an international
moratorium on whaling, most of these species that
frequent the Pacific Islands Region remain endangered
or vulnerable.
he Aquatic warbler MoU was concluded in Minsk, Belarus,
under CMS auspices and became effective on 30 April
2003. It will remain open for signature indefinitely.
It aims to safeguard the Aquatic warbler, a small
migratory waterbird that is estimated to have declined
sharply at a rate equivalent to 40% in the last
ten years.
To provide an international framework for coordinated
conservation efforts, a Memorandum of Understanding
(MoU) was launched on 15 September 2006. The MoU
was negotiated under the auspices of the Convention
on Migratory Species (CMS), in collaboration with
the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP).
The MoU includes plans to protect and conserve Pacific
cetaceans and their habitats, including their migratory
corridors.
Conservation Status
Cetaceans evolved from land mammals approximately
50 million years ago. While thoroughly adapted to
sea life, they retain some traces of their evolutionary
past. Cetaceans bear live young and feed them milk,
investing heavily in the upbringing and development
of each offspring. Cetaceans live long, mature late,
reproduce slowly and engage in complex social relationships.
They are capable advanced activities including echolocation
and long-distance communication, which provide them
with sophisticated tools to perceive and understand
their environment. A complex respiratory system
allows them to spend long stretches under water,
but they must surface regularly to breath air.
The spectacular leaps of whales and dolphins above
the water’s surface, as well as the sounds
some species use to communicate and function underwater,
fascinate humans. In many communities, there are
significant cultural connections between cetaceans
and humans. In much of the Pacific Islands Region,
whale and dolphin watching is a growing tourist
industry of importance to the region.
The survival of many cetacean populations that
frequent the waters of the Pacific Islands Region,
particularly those that have been severely depleted,
can be affected by interactions with fisheries,
hunting, pollution, collisions with boats, noise,
habitat degradation, climate change, disruption
of food chains and irresponsible tourism. The MoU’s
Action Plan addresses these and other threats to
cetaceans in the Pacific Islands Region.
Action Plan
The MoU was begun in an effort to bring coherence
to ongoing cetacean conservation activities across
the range. CMS’s key partner has been SPREP,
an international environmental organization created
by the governments and administrators of the Pacific
Islands Region. SPREP developed a Whale and Dolphin
Action Plan, which was adopted in 2003 and will
be revised in 2007. This plan was appended to the
MoU and forms the basis for on-the-ground conservation
efforts throughout the region.
Activities
Cetacean migration routes pass through the coastal
waters of various countries and territories as well
as the high seas. The MoU provides an intergovernmental
framework for governments, scientists and other
groups to monitor and coordinate ongoing and necessary
conservation efforts.
Numerous programmes are already underway and support
the MoU’s implementation. Countries have looked
to standardize how they report and collect data
from stranded cetaceans. Studies have been undertaken
to look at the interactions between cetaceans and
commercial fishing. Educational programmes have
helped connect local communities to conservation
efforts.
A public education initiative has raised awareness
of the threats caused to marine and bird life by
ocean pollution. Cetaceans are vulnerable to getting
tangled in plastic debris and there have been documented
cases of cetaceans mistaking plastic bags for food,
which can be lethal. Several governments have reacted
to the “plastic plague” by banning importation
of plastic bags and strengthening solid waste control
plans.
Through this MoU, the Pacific Islands Region seeks
to foster cooperation, build capacity and ensure
coordinated region-wide conservation for cetaceans
and their habitats, as well as to safeguard the
cultural values citations have for the people of
the Pacific Islands.
Range States
The Pacific Islands Region encompasses the following
states and territories:
Australia, Cook Islands, Federated States of Micronesia,
Fiji, French Polynesia, Kiribati, Marshall Islands,
Nauru, New Caledonia, New Zealand, Niue, Palau,
Papua New Guinea, Pitcairn Island, Samoa, Solomon
Islands, Tokelau, Tonga, Tuvalu, United States of
America (American Samoa, Guam and the Northern Mariana
Islands), Vanuatu and Wallis and Futuna.
An up-to-date list of the MoU's Signatories can
be found in its Agreement Summary Sheet.