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Armenia: Violation Of Fishing Ban Threatens Lake Sevan

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  • Armenia: Violation Of Fishing Ban Threatens Lake Sevan

    ARMENIA: VIOLATION OF FISHING BAN THREATENS LAKE SEVAN
    Marianna Grigoryan

    EurasiaNet, NY
    Nov 1 2006

    Armenian scientists are charging that violation of a ban on fishing for
    whitefish poses a severe challenge to the eco-system of Armenia's Lake
    Sevan, the largest alpine lake in the Caucasus and one of Armenia's
    best-known natural landmarks. In response, the government has pledged
    to tighten the ban as of mid-November, but local villagers remain
    skeptical, saying that their livelihoods depend on the fish.

    Lake Sevan's famous whitefish, or sig, helped Armenians overcome
    food shortages during the energy crisis of the early 1990s, but have
    since become threatened with extinction from over-fishing. Unclear
    environmental policies on the fish and a lack of economic alternatives
    for local fishermen have further complicated matters.

    In 2005, the National Academy of Sciences's Institute of Hydroecology
    and Ichthyology and a group of Russian scientists determined that the
    number of Lake Sevan whitefish had decreased by 17 times compared
    with 1983 levels. While in the mid-1980s the lake contained more
    than 11,000 tons of whitefish, supply now stands at only 625 tons,
    according to the findings.

    To correct the problem, the Ministry of Environmental Protection
    introduced a year-long ban on commercial fishing of whitefish in
    February 2006, but little attention has been paid to it, fishermen
    and scientists say. Blame is placed on the hard-scrabble economic
    conditions in the villages surrounding the 1,360-square-kilomter lake.

    "Let them give people jobs and we will not fish," said Garik Avetisyan,
    a middle-aged fisherman. "What shall we do? Die or what?

    If there're no fish, [our] families will die."

    Scientists, many of who favor a long-term ban on fishing for whitefish,
    say that the difficult living conditions will only grow worse if the
    whitefish population does not increase. In that case, large-scale
    commercial fishing may soon become impossible, too. The period from
    November through December, when the whitefish spawn, is particularly
    critical, they say.

    "Only one generation of whitefish remains in the lake today, instead
    of several generations in the past," said Boris Gabrielyan, deputy
    director of the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia's Institute
    of Hydroecology and Ichthyology. "The whitefish is not given time to
    spawn and propagate. It is not allowed to do that."

    "Our ongoing research this year shows that the situation has become
    worse as compared to last year," Gabrielyan continued. "If poaching
    continues at the same pace, whitefish will vanish as a commercial
    fish type. Whitefish resources have been exploited to an inadmissible
    degree."

    Meanwhile, as the whitefish population declines, the lake's eco-system
    is beginning to change. Gabrieylan charges that the increased presence
    of organic materials on which the fish feed is turning the lake into
    a swamp.

    The Ministry of Environmental Protection has dismissed the claim,
    however.

    "There can be no discussion about swamps. There is no such thing,"
    Artashes Ziroyan, head of the ministry's Bio-Resources Management
    Agency, said. "True, the amount of whitefish in the lake is not
    considered sufficient, but together with colleagues from the interior
    ministry and other departments, we will manage to preserve the
    whitefish [population] during the period of the fishing ban."

    Despite the ban, whitefish and its caviar can still be found in
    markets and shops.

    In Yerevan, which is the largest market for whitefish, prices for
    the fish have risen by at least several hundred percent in the last
    few years. Whitefish now sell for between 300-500 drams, or roughly
    $0.68 - $1.14, per fish in the capital's markets, and rank among
    shoppers as one of the most popular fish.

    "The fish is a very useful product," Amalia, a seller at one of
    Yerevan's markets, explained to her customers. Although formerly
    whitefish was affordable for nearly everyone, she continued, that
    situation has changed within the past few years. "It is in short
    supply. That's why prices for it have gone up."

    Commenting on the situation this summer, Minister of Environmental
    Protection Vardan Ayvazyan argued that the declining whitefish
    population is not "an environmental problem," and suggested that
    the ministry can do little in the face of persistent fishing by
    economically deprived residents.

    "In many cases, our orders are not obeyed, and no minister can say
    that during his time in office the control of fishing at Lake Sevan
    was good," Ayvazyan told reporters at a press conference. "In reality,
    there is a great problem of poverty [there]. Don't you pity these
    people [who live there]?"

    Ministry officials say that they will work with the interior ministry
    to monitor the lake regularly and watch for whitefish fishermen.

    Illegal catches are usually seized, with a report then issued to
    the media.

    But along the lake itself, some fishermen show little concern about
    the ministry's promises. "There is no ban," they say, smiling. "There
    is a way around everything."

    Nonetheless, young fishermen pushing a metal boat out onto the sky-blue
    lake say that they know the whitefish is under threat.

    "When we fished whitefish three or five years ago, we pulled 300-400
    kilograms of it with just two sweep-nets," said 24-year-old Garik
    Stepanyan, who has been fishing Lake Sevan for six years. "Now I have
    11 sweep nets and if I catch 100 whitefish a day, I will consider
    that a good day."

    Even with stricter enforcement of the ban, local fishermen say that
    they will continue to fish. Other options for economic survival
    are few.

    "We know that it is not allowed to fish whitefish," commented
    43-year-old Tigran Khugoyan, a fisherman from the village of Noratus
    on the lake's western shore. "But if your child is hungry and there
    is no job, the lake and fishing remain your only hope."

    Editor's Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a reporter for the Armenianow.com
    weekly in Yerevan.
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