Professional Skipper Magazine from VIP Publications

S94 July-Aug 2013 with NZ Aquaculture

The only specialised marine publication in Oceania that focuses on the maritime industry, from super yachts to small craft to large commercial ships, including coastal shipping, tugs, tow boats, barges, ferries, tourist, sport-fishing craft

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waterfront business New general manager for Seafood Innovations company of Seafood New Zealand and Plant and Food Research, has a new general manager. The chair of Seafood Innovations, Dave Sharp, says Mike Mandeno comes to the organisation "with a wealth of relevant seafood industry experience and is well versed in the many and varied aspects of the scientific and technological challenges facing the New Zealand seafood industry." Mike Mandeno was previously acting general manager of the Aquaculture and Biotechnologies Division at the Cawthron Institute in Nelson. Formerly he worked as research manager at Aquaculture New Zealand, where he developed New Zealand's first aquaculture sector research strategy. Mike has previous industry experience with seafood companies Sanford Limited and New Zealand King Salmon, and has a Masters degree in Marine Science from Otago University. "Mike will play the lead role in achieving our goal of investing $28m of industry and government money in new seafood industry research projects over the next seven years," Dave Sharp says. Mike Mandeno says he is looking forward to the role and sees it as a tremendous opportunity to add value to one of New Zealand's growing export sectors. Wider set net ban needed to save yellow-eyed penguins GENERATORS Kohler brings you gracious living onboard, no matter where your vessel or sense of adventure might take you. Providing commercial operators and recreational boating enthusiasts a full complement of powerful, quiet-running generators, enclosures, controls and more. VIP.S93 SEAFOOD INNOVATIONS LIMITED, the joint venture research FREEPHONE 0800 848 267 - www.transdiesel.com FOREST & BIRD is calling www.skipper.co.nz VIP.S94 for an immediate extension to a ban on commercial and recreational set netting around Otago Peninsula, following the release of a major new international review that has found that set nets kill more than 400,000 seabirds around the world every year. The results of the review, undertaken by conservation group BirdLife International, have been published in the Journal of Biological Conservation. There are less than six hundred pairs of yellow-eyed penguins left on mainland New Zealand. Around 150 of those live on the Otago Peninsula. Because the penguins feed in the coastal waters in which set nets are used, Forest & Bird Seabird Advocate Karen Baird says that yellow-eyed penguins are a prime example of a species whose chances of survival would improve with the help of better controls on set nets. "The current four kilometre wide set net ban around the Otago Peninsula's coast should be extended to around the 150 metre depth contour, the extent to which yellow-eyed penguins are known to forage. This effectively means that the protection zone needs to extend to around 20 kilometres offshore," Karen Baird says. Because the birds are also a cornerstone of Otago's $100 million a year eco-tourism industry, Karen Baird says there are also very good economic reasons to ban set nets. The risk of losing the yellow-eyed penguin colonies on the peninsula is particularly high, with 56 birds having been found dead around the Otago Peninsula this breeding season – the victims of an unknown toxin. July/August 2013 Professional Skipper 43

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