THE death of two dugongs found in illegal nets has prompted calls for more rangers to be deployed to catch poachers
The incident near Yarrabah last Thursday comes less than two months after three dugongs were found dead in nets about 3.5 nautical miles off Cairns.
Dugongs die in abandoned fishing net | Call to protect dugongs | Dugong kill disgusts town leader
The State and Federal governments are facing increasing pressure to scrap laws which allow traditional land owners to hunt dugongs and turtles using nets with a permit.
Aboriginal elders say the practice is an insult to traditional hunting heritage and that it fuels an
illegal meat trade where dugong can fetch $150 a kilo.
Commercial gains from hunting the animal breaches Commonwealth law.
The incident has sparked fresh calls for more rangers with greater powers to be deployed in areas prone to poaching.
Yarrabah Mayor Percy Neal said his council had rejected requests from dugong hunters to support the use of netting .
"Our people need to hunt the traditional way using 14ft (4.2m)wooden boats with special spears, it’s fair game then," he said.
"It’s not traditional hunting and it shouldn’t be tolerated … but we can’t do anything about it because people have permits from the State Government."
Federal Opposition environment spokesman Greg Hunt said rangers should be given more power to prosecute poachers while the Government needed to regulate the practice.
"Immediately, we need additional resources for indigenous rangers and more support for inspectors of the illegal dugong and turtle meat trade and their ability to prosecute," Mr Hunt said.
"The slaughtering of dugongs is out of control because of poachers. There is an epidemic of poaching."
Animal activist Colin Riddell, who is heading a campaign to overturn hunting laws, said a moratorium on dugong killing had to be introduced so the numbers could be monitored.
"No one knows how the dugong population has been affected by this," he said.
"Most of these hunters don’t have permits, it’s just open slather."
A spokesman for the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, which is investigating the latest dugong deaths, confirmed the
incident.
"The Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority found a set net as part of a patrol of the Yarrabah area which had two dead dugongs in it," he said.





