Kuwait Times

Conservati­onist fights to save Cambodia seahorses

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ACH SEH ISLAND, Cambodia: A 7-inch creature with a head resembling a horse and a monkey-like tail glides gracefully out of a dark coral crevice off the Cambodian coast. Master of camouflage, unrivaled as a hunter and a muchloved figure of ancient myths and legends, the seahorse may be spiraling toward annihilati­on after surviving beneath the waves for some 40 million years. Taking photograph­s and detailed notes, two divers swim through turbid water to spot the male in the crevice and a nearby female, both hanging on in a once-pristine habitat turned to withered coral beds and ragged remnants of seagrass meadows.

The tropical seas around this jungled island depict, in microcosm, both the seahorse’s threatened state - tens of millions are harvested globally each year and possible ways to save the iconic species from extinction. “The seahorse faces an enormous variety of threats,” says Paul Ferber, a British conservati­onist who has lived on Ach Seh Island for three years, studying the genus Hippocampu­s and trying to protect its ravaged environmen­t against an armada of illegal trawlers, crab traps and divers in sleek longboats specifical­ly targeting seahorses and related species.

Peering into the darkness one night, Ferber hears the tell-tale chugging of his No. 1 enemy: trawlers from neighborin­g Vietnam dragging miles-long nets with mesh so fine that even creatures smaller than seahorses can’t escape. “Big, nasty Vietnamese (boats). It’s either a seine trawler or a pair of them,” he says of vessels that leave behind a lifeless ocean. If equipped with electrifie­d nets, they can even stun and suck in living things burrowed in sea beds.

A powerfully built man with a pair of seahorses tattooed on his chest, Ferber urgently calls his contact in the Cambodian fisheries department, hoping its speedboat can rush from the mainland to arrest the intruders. No luck; the department’s fastest boat was being repaired. The 39-year-old Ferber, who underwent police training in Britain, said that before such cooperatio­n began, he and his team confronted illegal fishermen alone, armed only with “a slingshot and a bunch of rocks”. He said they were shot at with AK-47 rifles and even a spear gun, and one of their boats was rammed and sunk. Death threats continue.

Seahorses, caught in waters around the world, are sold mainly for Asian traditiona­l medicine, especially in Taiwan, Hong Kong, Vietnam and China. Amanda Vincent, a Canadian marine biologist and founder of Project Seahorse, estimates that more than 20 million are so consumed each year. Lesser numbers end up as key rings, encased in jewelry or other curios, or in aquariums, with the United States the world’s top buyer for the pet trade. Data from CITES, the internatio­nal monitor of the wildlife trade, shows that more than 630,000 were imported in the US from 2004 to 2014.

Neither their unique look and behavior (the male, for example, gives birth to the young) nor their place in popular imaginatio­n (as charioteer­s for the Greek god Poseidon, or powerful sea dragons of Chinese myth) seems to have prevented massive exploitati­on. In Chinese traditiona­l medicine, seahorses ground into powder or dried and eaten whole are believed to cure everything from kidney disease to baldness, despite a lack of scientific evidence. Rice wine with seahorses stuffed inside the bottles is advertised as a powerful sex tonic to “turn a man into an all-night Romeo”. —AFP

 ??  ?? In this Nov 27, photo, Jasmine, daughter of British conservati­onist fighting to save Cambodian seahorses Paul Ferber, reads a seahorse study book at a basecamp on Koh Ach Seh Island near the Cambodia-Vietnam border. — AP
In this Nov 27, photo, Jasmine, daughter of British conservati­onist fighting to save Cambodian seahorses Paul Ferber, reads a seahorse study book at a basecamp on Koh Ach Seh Island near the Cambodia-Vietnam border. — AP

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