PBS DOCUMENTARY OFFERS PUBLIC OPPORTUNITY TO LEARN MORE
ABOUT PROTECTION OF HORSESHOE CRABS & SURVIVAL OF RED KNOTS
(08/10) TRENTON - Department of Environmental
Protection Commissioner Lisa P. Jackson today urged all New
Jerseyans to view the upcoming nationally televised premiere of a
PBS documentary that illuminates one of the state’s critical
conservation challenges: averting further decline of the threatened
red knots and the horseshoe crabs they count on for survival.
The documentary, titled “Crash: A Tale of Two Species,” airs
Sunday, Feb. 10, from 8-9 p.m., on PBS. It offers an in-depth look
at the fragile interconnection between the dove-sized red knots and
the horseshoe crabs.
“This film is a must-see for every New Jerseyan,” Commissioner
Jackson said. “Biologists in New Jersey and throughout the world
acknowledge that the red knot and the horseshoe crab are in the
midst of a crisis. Rather than simply saying something must be done,
New Jersey is taking substantive action. Key among our strategies is
a moratorium on the harvest of horseshoe crabs to help the red knots
rebound. These two species are inextricably linked, and only by
aggressively conserving one can we have any hope of saving the
other.”
The DEP has proposed continuing a moratorium on the harvest of
horseshoe crabs until both the crab and the shorebird populations
show signs of recovery.
On Feb. 11, the proposed moratorium will be considered during a
special meeting of the New Jersey Marine Fisheries Council.
Commissioner Jackson urged the Marine Fisheries Council to allow
the DEP’s proposal to move toward adoption. “We have a
responsibility to do all we can to protect these two species, and I
ask the Council to support our efforts,” she said.
The world’s largest concentration of horseshoe crabs use Delaware
Bay’s beaches as principal egg-laying grounds, and those beaches are
a globally significant migratory stopover for the red knots and
other shorebirds which feed on the horseshoe crabs’ fat-rich eggs.
The critical feeding stopover is part of the red knots’ annual
20,000-mile journey from Chile’s Tierra del Fuego to their breeding
grounds in the Arctic.
During the past decade, a sharp increase in the harvest of
horseshoe crabs for use as bait has adversely impacted the
availability of crab eggs - leaving the red knots unable to gain the
weight necessary to complete their nonstop flight to the Arctic and
successfully breed.
The red knot population is now so critically low that scientists
fear the species could become extinct within five years.
The PBS NATURE documentary was produced, written, directed and
narrated by Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Allison Argo. Spotlighted
in the film are Amanda Dey, a biologist with the DEP’s Endangered
and Nongame Species Program, and Larry Niles, retired chief of the
ENSP, who annually leads an international team of biologists to the
red knots’ wintering grounds at South America’s southern tip to
assess the birds.
The special meeting of the New Jersey Marine Fisheries Council
will be held at 3:30 p.m. at the Batsto Village Office Visitor
Center in Wharton State Forest. For a map and directions, visit
www.nj.gov/dep/parksandforests/parks/wharton.html.
For more information on the red knot and the horseshoe crab,
visit
www.nj.gov/dep/fgw/ensp/redknot.htm.
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