Time Out for Tarakihi






9100 Petitions Signed



20% Reduction in TACC



25,200 Campaign video views


Tarakihi is a mealtime favourite for people who fish and those who buy it retail because it is notoriously good for cooking when fresh. The tarakihi stock on the east coast, between Otago and east Northland, is severely depleted from years of trawling. Recreational fishers are finding it increasingly difficult catch tarakihi. In some areas recreational fishers report there are no tarakihi. Stocks need to be rebuilt to healthy levels.

In July 2018, Fisheries New Zealand proposed changes for the future management of tarakihi. Their proposals didn’t go far enough in trying to rebuild tarakihi abundance so LegaSea kicked into gear and developed a public awareness campaign – Time Out for Tarakihi.

The Time Out for Tarakihi campaign included a petition, media statements, targeted emails, social media, and two videos.

LegaSea called on the Minister Stuart Nash to cut commercial catches by 65%, to rebuild the stock from its all-time low point. Read the full submission here.

LegaSea initiated a petition seeking support for the following statement – “I want the Minister of Fisheries to make a bold decision by October 2018 to reduce the environmental impacts of trawling and rebuild our tarakihi stocks within 10 years, or less”.

The 6-week campaign closed on August 27th, generating over 9,100 petitions.

In September Stuart Nash announced there would be a 20% cut to commercial catches as of October 1st, 2018. He has signalled further cuts in 2019, unless the commercial industry can deliver a “plan to rebuild the stock within 10 years”.

This is not good enough. The tarakihi stock on the east coast is depleted, smashed by decades of trawling. History has proven that commercial fishers cannot be relied upon to rebuild the tarakihi stock.

LegaSea will be monitoring progress and will let you know what more we can do when the east coast tarakihi fishery is reviewed again. Make sure you sign up today to stay tuned for more.




Celebrating our collective action

2021 Update – Historic High Court decision for tarakihi sets a fisheries management precedent. Read more.

LegaSea is grateful for the support and enthusiasm of many people and organisations during the Time Out for Tarakihi campaign.

At the risk of omitting some organisations (let us know if we’ve missed you) we are celebrating the excellent support from Partners and aligned organisations including:

 

  1. Media outlets and magazines.
  2. Marine Deals – sent out campaign flyers with every order.
  3. Metservice – regular placement of campaign adverts online.
  4. Burnsco – petition packs placed instore.
  5. Hunting & Fishing – selected placement of petition packs instore.
  6. Strong support from many retail outlets in the Northland, Central and Wellington regions.
  7. Dive fraternity – strong support from many outlets and organisations including the New Zealand Underwater Association.
  8. New Zealand Angling & Casting Association – promotion online & interclub.
  9. Marlborough Recreational Fishers Association – driving awareness around the top of the South Island.


Summary

The Time Out for Tarakihi campaign was effective in engaging people in the northern, central, and southern regions. People strongly object to the bulk harvesting and trawling of nursery areas, and the targeting of juvenile tarakihi populations.

This campaign was useful in elevating public awareness of the need for an inquiry into fisheries management and the Quota Management System.

LegaSea appreciates the contribution and effort by all volunteers, contributors, aligned organisations and Partners. Their combined effort made this campaign worthwhile.

The good oil

The latest science assessment rates tarakihi on the east coast at 17% of its original size, below acceptable management levels. This depletion has had a major impact, reducing catches of take-home fish and overall recreational catch. Commercial catch has been maintained because tarakihi are mostly caught by trawlers targeting fish aggregating for spawning, or juvenile, nursery areas.

In September 2018 Stuart Nash announced there would be a 20% cut to commercial catches as of October 1st. He has signalled futher cuts in 2019, unless the commercial industry can deliver a “plan to rebuild the stock within 10 years”.

This is not good enough. The tarakihi stock on the east coast is depleted, smashed by decades of trawling. History has proven that commercial fishers cannot be relied upon to rebuild the tarakihi stock.

It is the Minister’s duty to rebuild depleted stocks, not commercial fishers.

The Minister is obliged to manage fish stocks so they are abundant enough to provide for future generations’ needs. The sad irony is that in many area tarakihi are so depleted the stock is not even providing for today’s needs let alone future expectations.

2018 – Joint recreational submission.

2019 – Joint recreational submission.

What’s the solution?

Collectively, we need to face up to the fact that we cannot keep tearing through our fish populations and benthic (seabed) environment using 19th century trawl techniques and expecting them to sustain us in 2019 and beyond. We have to get real.

We must be brave enough to set high standards for anyone exploiting our marine environment. Then we measure all activity against those standards. If this means creating a 12-mile inshore zone free from trawling and mobile bulk harvesting methods then let’s just do it.

There are smarter technologies that leave a lighter footprint on the environment available now. The lack of investment in innovation just proves how little money the fishers on the water are making from fishing. We must reduce our impact on the marine environment, and we must rebuild our tarakihi stock so hard working commercial fishers can make a decent income to support innovation.

We need to change how we do things so that all New Zealanders benefit from the exploitation of our fish.

LegaSea will be monitoring progress and will let you know what more we can do when the east coast tarakihi fishery is reviewed again. Make sure you sign up today to stay tuned for more.

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History

The QMS. A rotten system

November 21, 2021 Tarakihi and bluenose are important target species for people fishing on the east coast of New Zealand, between Northland to Southland. Having them abundant and available is important for our social and cultural wellbeing, with the added bonus that they taste great when eaten fresh with family and friends. Under the Quota Management System (QMS) […]

Tarakihi update

June 19, 2021 The High Court has ruled that in 2019 Stuart Nash, the then Minister of Fisheries, did not act legally when deciding on the management settings for tarakihi on the whole east coast. Tarakihi and the environment in which they live have been decimated by years of trawling, with the stock collapsing to just 16% of […]

LegaSea celebrates historic tarakihi legal decision

June 19, 2021 A high court decision that protects tarakihi sets a precedent for protecting other fish populations and is a milestone in fisheries management, says marine conservation group LegaSea. “It’s a hugely important judgement that has run under the radar”, said LegaSea spokesperson Sam Woolford. “Firstly, the court affirmed that decisions made by the previous Minister of […]

Self-regulating commercial fishing plan fails at first hurdle

March 25, 2021 Years of poor fisheries management by successive governments under the Quota Management System (QMS) has resulted in tarakihi populations along the east coast of both islands falling to just 15% of their original population size. In 2019, the previous Minister of Fisheries responded to this crisis with a token 10 percent cut in commercial catch […]

Money is king when it comes to tarakihi

November 22, 2019 From October 1st Stuart Nash has reduced the commercial catch of tarakihi on the east coast of the North and South Islands by 10 percent. LegaSea was calling for a 40 percent reduction. The arguments for minimal cuts were bolstered by an economic report commissioned by Fisheries New Zealand describing the impacts of any changes […]

Talk is cheap

November 10, 2019 In the same week that our Prime Minister is explaining the Maori concept of kaitiakitanga, guardianship, to the United Nations her fisheries Minister is at home setting catch limits way too high for some fish stocks. Stuart Nash announced his decisions for 20 fish stocks four days before they were due to come into effect […]

Kiwis want tarakihi fishing quota cut significantly amid major concern over fisheries management

October 17, 2019 Seventy percent of New Zealanders want the commercial fishing quota for tarakihi cut dramatically to help the country’s fish and chips favourite to recover, a new survey has revealed. The survey conducted by Horizon Research for LegaSea, a not-for-profit organisation raising awareness of issues affecting the marine environment, found 70% want a cut of between […]

Tarakihi review – take time out

July 19, 2019 Tarakihi management is under review and we need you to get stuck in and support the Minister to make a precautionary decision aimed at rebuilding depleted stocks on the east coast between Otago and Northland. Last year over 9000 of us signed LegaSea’s Time Out for Tarakihi petition calling for the Minister to cut commercial […]

Shelving not legitimate management

October 15, 2018 As part of the recent tarakihi review corporate commercial interests supported the shelving of tarakihi catch in lieu of the Minister reducing the Total Allowable Commercial Catch. We submitted against the shelving proposal. It is pleasing to report that Stuart Nash has rejected the proposal and applied cuts to commercial catches in the stock spanning […]

Minister’s commitments signal change

September 30, 2018 A positive to come out of the latest round of stock reviews is the Minister’s commitment to change or revisit some long-standing practices that we have objected to for many years. These include truncated consultation timeframes, the inconsistency in setting aside allowances for fishing related mortality, and recognising that current fishing practices need to change. […]


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