The great cormorant bird is eating too much fish, with some calling for a cull


By AGENCY
The great cormorant became a protected species in Europe in 1979. — Pixabay

The great cormorant bird is eating too much fish for the liking of a group of European Union nations that recently called for a cull.

Great cormorant numbers have ballooned in Europe since the bird became a protected species in 1979, much to the annoyance of human fishers in countries where the black feathered animal is a rival.

"The annual fish consumption of an adult great cormorant is estimated at approximately 180kg whereas the average fish consumption per EU citizen amounts to around 23kg," the Czech Republic, Sweden and seven other EU members wrote in a note to illustrate "the urgency of the situation".

The issue was placed on the agenda of a meeting of EU agriculture and fisheries ministers in Brussels, Belgium recently where the countries called for the bird's population to be kept at "an ecologically and economically acceptable level".

In practice, this would entail lowering its protected status to allow for more hunting – a move opposed by conservationists who say it would not help restore fish stocks.

"We cannot consider nature as if it only belongs to humans and treat native predators as a nuisance," Marion Bessol of BirdLife International said as the idea was first floated in September.

"Cormorants have as much right to eat fish as we do."Cormorants' appetite for fish drove the bird almost to the brink of extinction in Europe, with colonies systematically destroyed in some instances with help from fire brigades and military forces, according to a report by the European Parliament.

In the early 1960s, the species numbered only a few thousand breeding pairs in the main breeding range comprising the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark, Sweden and Poland, the paper said.

Numbers rebounded after the bird was granted protection status. There are currently up to two million great cormorants in Europe.

"The great cormorant ... is causing a lot of problems in the Baltic Sea," Finnish Agriculture Minister Sari Essayah told reporters in Brussels.

Cull proponents will have to persuade a majority of EU states for their plan to go ahead.

A recent similar move against the wolf proved successful, resulting last year in a lowering of the canine's protection status. – AFP

 

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