Otago Daily Times

Hundreds submit on Bill to protect native freshwater fish

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WELLINGTON: Hundreds of people have made submission­s on legislatio­n intended to give more protection to native freshwater fish.

The Government said the Indigenous Freshwater Fish Amendment Bill would allow the responsibl­e minister to address threats such as damage to spawning sites and drainage works or pump stations.

Many submission­s came from the whitebaiti­ng community on the West Coast and said there needed to be more consultati­on before the Bill was passed.

Opponents said one clause in the amendment Bill would give the directorge­neral the ability to close the whitebait season indefinite­ly without consultati­on.

They also said returning rivers to their natural state, taking away culverts and not draining swamps would help the whitebait population flourish.

There was also a suggestion local government should be able to make regulation­s covering their area, rather than having one rule for all areas.

One submission said the writer had not seen a decline in the number of fish they caught, despite fishing in the area for years.

The North Shore Flyfishers group in Auckland said it was greatly concerned by a clause allowing the removal of trout from rivers and lakes.

Trout had been in the country’s waterways 150 years, and all freshwater species coexisted during that time, it said. — RNZ

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