THREE KEY FACTS听
- Total of 230 recreational anglers caught illegally raiding marine reserves in two years.听
- Department of Conservation urges the public to report illegal fishing with detailed information and evidence including photos and video.听
- Legasea鈥檚 Chris Scott highlights greed as a primary driver behind repeated poaching offences.听
Two hundred and thirty recreational anglers have been caught illegally raiding marine reserves around New Zealand in the past two years in what the Department of Conservation (DoC) describes as a 鈥渟ignificant problem鈥.听
Official information obtained by the听Herald听reveals the extent of the issue, showing Auckland, Taranaki, Hawke鈥檚 Bay and Coromandel as the locations where most offences were racked up.听
DoC鈥檚 principal science adviser in the agency鈥檚 marine ecosystem team, Shane Geange, said some people were听unaware of the rules but that 鈥渨asn鈥檛 an excuse鈥.听
He said others plundered fully protected areas out of 鈥渄esperation鈥, and some wilfully and repeatedly ignored the rules.听
鈥淵ou鈥檝e got people who are just repeat offenders, they don鈥檛 care about the rules and they鈥檙e going back [to the same areas] to try their luck and circumvent the rules over and over again,鈥 he told the听Herald.听
Divers gathering kina inside Auckland's Long Bay Okura marine reserve. Photo / Supplied听
Geange pointed to a case last year where a man, who has name suppression, was听fined $4000 after repeatedly taking snapper听from the marine reserve at Auckland鈥檚 Long Bay, and another case where a Gisborne man was jailed for taking crayfish from Te Tapuwae o Rongokako reserve.听
A spokesman for the recreational fishing group Legasea, Chris Scott, was听scathing of those who disregarded the rules.听
鈥淭here鈥檚 a huge element of greed. You see people who have been caught several times. They don鈥檛 care. There鈥檚 no excuse for that 鈥 that鈥檚 flat-out poaching,鈥 he said.听
A man kayak fishing in Whang膩rei Harbour's marine reserve. Photo / Supplied听
Scott said fishers not knowing the locations of marine reserves didn鈥檛 wash considering the abundance of information online.听
鈥淎 lot of these people will have the excuse that they didn鈥檛 know but that just means you鈥檝e got to do a better job of preparing where you鈥檙e going fishing. Look where you鈥檙e fishing, plan out your trip.鈥听
The听Herald鈥檚听data obtained from DoC showed between May 15, 2022, and May 15, 2024, rangers identified 165 offences during patrols of marine reserves and there were another 32 occasions where rangers intercepted offenders after听tip-offs from the public.听
During the same time period, DoC received a total of 361 calls or emails from the public about alleged illegal activity which resulted in an additional 33 offences.听
Department of Conservation principal science adviser Shane Geange at the Taputeranga Marine Reserve on Wellington鈥檚 South Coast. Photo / Mark Mitchell听
Geange said DoC had limited resources and the agency relied 鈥渉eavily鈥 on the public. He urged people to take photos, videos and notes if they spotted offending, providing they could do so safely.听
鈥淲hen the public report [to DoC], we need really good information to help support a prosecution if it comes to that. GPS locations are really good if we鈥檝e got that, photographs of the offence as well are really valuable, [vehicle] licence plate numbers and boat registrations,鈥 he said.听
It was not just听recreational fishers听who got caught fishing in marine reserves.听
Amaltal Fishing Co, owned by Talley's Group, was fined for fishing in Hikurangi Marine Reserve off Kaik艒ura with its trawler the Amaltal Mariner. Photo / Supplied听
The Ministry for Primary Industries told the听Herald听since 2018, there had been 10 cases of commercial boats fishing in marine reserves.听
Six cases resulted in prosecution, one skipper was issued a warning, and two cases are still being actively investigated.听
In 2021, Talley鈥檚 Group subsidiary, Amaltal Fishing Co, was fined $27,600 for fishing in the Hikurangi Marine Reserve off Kaik艒ura on听trawler the听Amaltal Mariner.听
Fisheries compliance north harbour district manager Glen Blackwell said commercial operators breaking the rules was particularly serious.听
鈥淭hey [commercial fishing operators] make their livelihood fishing and they above anyone else need to know what the limitations are on their actions, where they can go, and where they can鈥檛,鈥 he said.听
鈥淲e regard it as a very serious offending if those guys are apprehended fishing in closed areas.鈥听
He also emphasised the need for recreational anglers to be aware of fully protected areas.听
鈥淭here are lots of ways for people to be able to find out where they can go. Most vessels have chart plotters and marine reserves automatically show up on those. If you鈥檙e not sure, ring your nearest DoC office or ring your nearest MPI fisheries compliance office.鈥听
Poaching hotspots around NZ听
Divers photographed gathering seafood in Wellington's Taputeranga marine reserve. Photo / Supplied听
New Zealand has 44 marine reserves, which encompass 9.5% of the country鈥檚 territorial seas [12 nautical miles offshore].听
This includes large marine reserves around offshore islands, such as the Kermadec Islands in the north and the Auckland Islands in the subantarctic region.听
DoC figures provide an insight where most offences are detected.听
Public tip-offs to DoC about breaching rules at Auckland鈥檚 Long Bay marine reserve were by far the highest number, with 96 notifications of offending logged over two years.听
However, this isn鈥檛 a true reflection of offending rates given multiple people could report the same incident.听
When it comes to alleged poaching identified during DoC patrols, Te Matuku marine reserve off Waiheke Island tops the list of where most offences were detected, followed by Tapuae reserve off Taranaki.听
Cathedral Cove reserve in Coromandel, Wellington鈥檚 Taputeranga reserve and Te Angiangi off Hawke鈥檚 Bay come next. Then it鈥檚 K膩piti and Auckland鈥檚 Long Bay.听
The Akaroa marine reserve, Tonga Island in the Abel Tasman National Park, and Horoirangi reserve off Cable Bay are hotspots for offending in the South Island.听
Geange said marine reserves are fully protection areas, meaning it鈥檚 not only an offence to take kaimoana, but also anything that washes up on a beach in a protected area, including seaweed or driftwood.听
鈥淎ll of those things have important ecological functions within the reserve. So they are also protected.鈥听
What drives offending?听
Two anglers fishing in K膩piti marine reserve north of Wellington. Photo / Supplied听
Legasea鈥檚 Chris Scott said听poor management of fisheries in New Zealand, which is governed by the Quota Management System [QMS], may encourage more people to take seafood from areas where fish are abundant.听
He believed the QMS was 鈥渂roken鈥 and there were fewer baitfish and more undersized fish being caught as a result.听
Scott said people were also 鈥減ushing the boundaries鈥 around reserves by setting burley trails to coax fish and crayfish outside protection zones.听
The听cost-of-living crisis听might also play a role when it came to blatant breaches, he said.听
鈥淟egally or illegally, they鈥檙e going to put their families first. We see 90% of our seafood sent overseas and the rest of it is sold back to Kiwis at crazy prices in retail.鈥听
He described the price of snapper at $50 a kilogram as 鈥渦nreal鈥 and out of reach of most. However, despite pressures on families, he said this was not an excuse to pillage no take zones.听
Seafood New Zealand chief executive Lisa Futschek said the price of fish was not a mitigating factor for fishing in a marine reserve, and noted there were low-cost options available.听
鈥淔or example, right now you can purchase 1kg of frozen Monkfish fillets or 1kg of frozen Tarakihi fillets for $12. Most fishmongers run weekly specials, so it pays to keep an eye out,鈥 she said.听
Futschek rejected the claim that the QMS is to blame for recreational poaching, saying the country鈥檚 fisheries were in 鈥済ood shape鈥.听
MPI supported this assertion, saying the QMS responded to changes in fisheries abundance using the best available scientific evidence.听
If you see any illegal or suspicious activity, contact the 24-hour DOC emergency hotline听0800 DOC HOT听(0800 362 468) and report it.听
Michael Morrah听is a senior investigative reporter/team leader at the听Herald. He won the best coverage of a major news event at the 2024 Voyager NZ Media Awards and has twice been named reporter of the year. He has been a broadcast journalist for 20 years and joined the听Herald鈥檚 video team in July 2024.听
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