Daily Maverick

Former fisher says quotas are reason he relies on Happy the seal to make money

- By Suné Payne

In Cape Town’s Hout Bay harbour, Deon Barendse stood talking to DM168 while a seal named Happy waited for the fish the former fisher was cutting up with scissors. Barendse uses the fish to pacify the seal, who then allows tourists to take pictures with him. The tourists give donations to Barendse.

“It’s almost 50/50 – I get him food; he makes sure my children get food. I don’t see a problem with him,” he says.

Feeding seals is an illegal act under the Threatened or Protected Marine Species regulation­s, says Albi Modise, the chief director of communicat­ions in the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and Environmen­t (DFFE).

The department neither permits nor encourages members of the public to feed, take photos or interact with seals. The seals are wild animals and interactio­n encourages seals to become “unnaturall­y habituated to humans”, Modise says. “Feeding encourages seals to become reliant on humans for food instead of foraging for their own food.”

Becoming reliant on humans creates behavioura­l problems. “Seals have been known unpredicta­bly to become aggressive towards humans and bite individual­s,” he adds.

This interactio­n, which Modise describes as “artificial”, causes seals to stop foraging, overeat, become obese and frequent harbours where they are at risk of injury.

The seals in the harbour come from a colony on Duiker Island, just off the coast of Hout Bay. Seals are common along Cape Town’s coast – from Hout Bay to Kalk Bay – where tourists snap pictures of them basking in the sun.

According to the Two Oceans Aquarium, there are about two million Cape fur seals along the southern coastline, living in between 24 and 40 colonies.

In 2020, complaints were raised on local radio station CapeTalk about the illegal feeding of seals. Callers said it was cruel towards the animals, with the seals often being hit by the feeders, or the feeders being rude to people who refused to provide donations.

At the time, the department’s Tots Dlulane, the national director of oceans and coast enforcemen­t, said a possible remedy was to move the seals to the aquarium.

The aquarium told DM168 that it has not housed seals since about 2006. The aquarium’s seal teams worked in the V&A Waterfront, but would, on occasion, assist seals elsewhere – including Hout Bay, where help is often given to seals entangled in litter.

“The DFFE has considered various options to solve and regulate this issue,” says Modise. The removal of seals was found not to be viable for various reasons.

Modise says the department has increased its visibility at the harbour. In February, an illegal seal feeder was arrested.

Feeding and harassing of seals is a criminal offence, with conviction­s carrying maximum penalties, including imprisonme­nt for up to five years, a fine of up to R5-million, or both a fine and imprisonme­nt.

Barendse started interactin­g with seals 14 years ago when the quantity of allocated fishing catches was dropped. “I decided I loved animals so I communicat­ed with [the seals] and I treated them like [I treat] dogs at home.”

Barendse was caught by authoritie­s three years ago and served six months’ jail time, suspended for three years.

“At the end of the day, there’s no work for us,” he says.

Other fishers tell similar stories: depleted fish stocks and fish quotas have left the fishing community, predominan­tly from the Hangberg suburb, despondent.

A 2021 National Data and Informatio­n Report for Marine Spatial Planning states that 75% of all South Africa’s fishing takes place in the Western Cape. Nationally, the fishing industry employs 41,000 people directly and creates 81,000 jobs indirectly.

But this comes at a cost: species such as abalone, yellowfin tuna, West Coast rock lobster – species often caught by the Hout Bay fishers – were listed as “severely depleted”. The number of stocks considered overexploi­ted had increased from 12 in 2012 to 15 in 2016.

John Esau (62) says he has been a fisher for almost 50 years, mainly catching snoek. Now, fish are hard to find and he has to wander the harbour, joining crayfish catchers. “The little crayfish that I have, it’s nothing… I need to put food on the table.”

The department says it periodical­ly conducts a Fishing Rights Allocation Process (FRAP), which gives individual­s and companies the opportunit­y to obtain commercial fishing rights.

Modise says the department is also rolling out a small-scale fishing sector, “which prioritise­s previously marginalis­ed groups of fishers, people who depend on marine resources for their livelihood and those who have a history of fishing as defined by the Marine Living Resources Act”.

 ?? Photos: Brenton Geach ?? Above: Deon Barendse, a former fisher, has developed a relationsh­ip with a seal known as Happy. He says he would be upset if the seal was kept in an aquarium. Animals, he says, are meant to be in nature and not ‘locked away’ in an unfamiliar habitat.
Below: John Esau (left) and Rudy Quanson are two fishers who say that fishing permits and quotas don’t take indigenous communitie­s into account when it comes to ‘equal shares’ in fishing allocation­s.
Photos: Brenton Geach Above: Deon Barendse, a former fisher, has developed a relationsh­ip with a seal known as Happy. He says he would be upset if the seal was kept in an aquarium. Animals, he says, are meant to be in nature and not ‘locked away’ in an unfamiliar habitat. Below: John Esau (left) and Rudy Quanson are two fishers who say that fishing permits and quotas don’t take indigenous communitie­s into account when it comes to ‘equal shares’ in fishing allocation­s.
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