Albuquerque Journal

Islands in crisis

Chinese fishing fleets and COVID-19 threaten natural wonder of Galapagos

- BY SUSANNE RUST

GALAPAGOS ISLANDS, Ecuador — Just south of the Galapagos’ Marchena Island, there’s a dive spot known by locals as the fish arena.

There, within the choppy, cool waters of the Pacific, thousands of colorful fish swim in schools, lobsters poke their long antennae out of rocky outcrops, dolphins bear their young, and moray eels gape menacingly at visitors who swim too close.

Charles Darwin documented the rich biota of these islands in the early 1800s. In more recent times, an unofficial network of local tour boats and fishing vessels has worked to protect it, by keeping an eye out for those who might harm the marine bounty. But the pandemic has grounded this surveillan­ce fleet, creating an opening for outsiders.

Over the summer, more than 300 Chinese fishing vessels — many designed to hold 1,000 tons of catch — waited at the marine preserve’s border, ready to snatch up sea life as it migrated south toward the waters off Peru and Chile.

By some estimates, China has a “distant-water” fishing fleet of 17,000 vessels that has been involved in fishing conflicts off West Africa, Argentina and Japan in recent years. Now this fleet is triggering similar anger off Ecuador and Peru, two nations highly dependent on their robust near-shore fisheries.

“This is an attack on our resources,” said Angel Yanez Vinueza, mayor of Santa Cruz canton, the Galapagos’ equivalent of a province. “They are killing the species we have protected and polluting our biota with the plastic waste they drop overboard. They are raping the Galapagos.”

The fleet is hardly the only threat to this park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

As a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, tourism has plummeted — tour boats have been moored in Santa Cruz Island’s Academy Bay for months, while shops and restaurant­s are shuttered along Puerto Ayora’s main drag, Avenida Charles Darwin.

It has laid bare the vulnerabil­ity of an economic model that is 90% dependent upon tourism dollars, while also highlighti­ng the extraordin­ary beauty and remoteness of the islands — and the magic that is lost when thousands of tourists descend daily into this fragile ecosystem.

During a recent visit to the Galapagos, a Los Angeles Times reporting team — the only visitors touring the park by boat — witnessed penguins swimming alongside tropical fish and sea turtles, krill blooms clouding the shallow waters with pink flotsam, and migrating tuna and hammerhead sharks meandering through the darker, deeper waters.

Normally, pods of dolphins and whales stay out of the busy harbor in Academy Bay. But with the tourist boats out of commission, they are swimming around the area for the first time in decades. Brown pelicans are nesting in the nearby cliffs and mangroves — a sight Fiddi Angermeyer, 68, a local tour operator and business owner, says he hasn’t seen since he was a kid.

The situation has prompted politician­s, environmen­talists and business owners to wonder how the region can regrow and provide a vibrant economy and jobs for its residents while maintainin­g the wild essence of the park and reducing its carboninte­nsive requiremen­ts — the jet planes and cruising boats of internatio­nal tourism.

“It’s like it was 30 or 40 years ago,” said Mary Crowley, the director of Ocean Voyages Institute, a Sausalito, California, environmen­tal organizati­on working to rid the oceans of plastic. She’s been to the Galapagos 23 times since 1972. “That splendor has returned.”

It’s also exposed the critical role tourism plays in the upkeep and safety of the park: Without visitors traveling to the outer islands and local fishing crews patrolling the park’s waters, no one is watching for poaching or picking up the litter and plastic floating in from the mega-fleets and mainland.

The calculus is clear, Angermeyer said: “If there are no tourists, there is no park. And if there’s no park, there are no tourists.”

Mosquera Island is not much more than a skinny spit of sand and rock off Baltra Island, where the Galapagos Islands’ main airport is located.

On a recent afternoon, baby sea lions, Galapagos pigeons and Sally Lightfoot crabs scrambled across the rocks or lolled in the sunbaked sand on Mosquera’s southern shore. The airport and the channel separating the islands were largely silent — just the sound of waves lapping and sea lion moms and pups barking.

But a walk around the rocky edge of the island showed something deeply distressin­g to Fernando Ortiz, a park guide and former director of the region’s chapter of Conservati­on Internatio­nal: scores of plastic bottles, shoes and equipment packaging — labeled with Chinese characters — poked out of the jagged rocks.

“These are from those boats,” said Ortiz, pointing south, toward the horizon, where the fleet of Chinese fishing vessels had congregate­d roughly 200 nautical miles away. He noted the “newness” of the items, with labels not faded by sun or sea.

In July, the Ecuadorian navy had become alarmed as the fleet approached the edge of the 200-mile zone around the park where commercial fishing is illegal.

For years, fishing crews have trawled this zone, hoping to capitalize on the fruits of conservati­on — increasing­ly healthy and robust fish stocks — said Boris Worm, a researcher at Dalhousie University in Canada who has studied the fishery.

But last summer, the number of vessels exploded. In late August, a U.S. Coast Guard cutter was called in to help Ecuador’s navy patrol the area.

Capt. Brian Anderson, commanding officer of the Coast Guard cutter Bertholf, said the Chinese brought in a tanker ship, which provided fuel to the other ships, and processing ships, where the fishing vessels could dump their harvest and go out and collect more.

“It was like a city,” he said, noting the fleet had all the pieces it needed to stay out for months without returning to home ports.

Several of the Chinese vessels weren’t reporting their location electronic­ally, he said, and one was reporting its location as Alaska. But without jurisdicti­on in the area, and nothing blatantly illegal to report to the Ecuadorian navy, the Coast Guard was relegated to watching, he said.

For its part, China has contended it has “zero tolerance” toward illegal fishing. In a July 23 statement, the Chinese Embassy in Quito said China respects Ecuador’s measures to protect the environmen­t and preserve marine resources.

But John Serafini, chief executive of a Virginia-based military defense and commercial data analytics startup called HawkEye 360, said his company’s research — which relies on radio frequency and satellite imagery to process movement — showed many suspicious signals coming from within the zone this summer.

In 2017, a Chinese fishing vessel intercepte­d off the Galapagos was found to be hauling 300 tons of fish, which included tens of thousands of illegally caught sharks.

Mayor Vinueza said the continuing presence of the fleet is an assault on the preserve and his residents’ livelihood, especially in the face of the economic devastatio­n the park is suffering.

In August, hundreds of Santa Cruz canton residents took to the streets to protest the fishing fleet — worried it was depleting the park’s natural resources, potentiall­y giving one more reason for tourists not to return.

 ?? CAROLYN COLE/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? Animals such as these Galapagos penguins have flourished as the pandemic keeps visitors away, but the lack of tourism in the Ecuadorian islands could devastate Galapagos National Park’s funding and has left an opening for poachers to move in.
CAROLYN COLE/LOS ANGELES TIMES Animals such as these Galapagos penguins have flourished as the pandemic keeps visitors away, but the lack of tourism in the Ecuadorian islands could devastate Galapagos National Park’s funding and has left an opening for poachers to move in.
 ??  ?? Fernando Ortiz, a park guide and former director of the region’s chapter of Conservati­on Internatio­nal, picks up plastic bottles, shoes and equipment packaging labeled with Chinese characters from he jagged rocks of Mosqueta Island, Galapagos on Oct. 1.
Fernando Ortiz, a park guide and former director of the region’s chapter of Conservati­on Internatio­nal, picks up plastic bottles, shoes and equipment packaging labeled with Chinese characters from he jagged rocks of Mosqueta Island, Galapagos on Oct. 1.

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