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8AM Tuesday 02 December, 2008

Illegal net kills fish and platypus

Illegal net kills fish and platypus

One of the disturbing photos showing the platypus entangled in a gillnet at Obi Obi Creek. Photo: Contributed

A sickening act of illegal netting at Obi Obi Creek, near Kenilworth, has killed a platypus and scores of fish.

Disturbing photos supplied to the Daily show the platypus entangled in the gillnet, which had been strung across the river 200 metres from the mouth.

“It killed just about everything that came across it,” said John, who stumbled upon the ghastly scene at the platypus habitat while kayaking last Friday afternoon.

John, who wants his identity protected for fear of retaliation, was so outraged that he contacted the Environmental Protection Agency.

However, both he and the EPA hold little hope of finding the culprits.

John estimates the net had been there two or three days before he found it.

“I think whoever did it saw the platypus and thought, ‘I’m in trouble’, and just left it,” he said.

With half the net still in the water, John said his main concern was untangling the live fish.

He said 12 of 20 catfish caught in the net were dead while four Australian bass and two freshwater mullet were also killed.

A lungfish had been scaled on the bank.

“It’s illegal to use a gillnet in a freshwater river in Queensland,” John said.

“I’m totally disgusted. I was so upset when I found the platypus I was shaking.”

John fears endangered Mary River cod were also caught. He said a sign letting people know the cod were in the area was missing.

“One of them could have been in there,” he said. “Who knows what was in there?”

John has being kayaking on the river for years and often sees platypus, turtles and lungfish.

“I’ve never seen a net like that on the river before,” he said.

Recent Comments

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on 9 October, 2008 at 9:08 a.m. ( Suggest removal )
Government lungfish researchers have reported locating electronic tags, which had been fitted to live specimens to track them in the wild, beside campfires and in the bush around campsites on the Mary.
on 9 October, 2008 at 10:48 a.m. ( Suggest removal )
My stance against corporal and capital punishment gets severely tested reading stories like this.
on 9 October, 2008 at 11:41 a.m. ( Suggest removal )
Ed, As a person who has had pleasure fishing in creeks and rivers, the above story makes me sick to see this sort of attack and I would have to agree with the comments from avatar. It again highlights how sick some people are in our society.
on 9 October, 2008 at 10:42 p.m. ( Suggest removal )
The photo of the dead platypus is so disturbing.
They are such elusive, intricate, rare little creatures
you hardly ever see them on ponds or in streams.
If you do catch a glimpse of one it is such a pleasure.
Poor old guy, just minding his own business in his territory and some sadistic cruel human kills him.
on 10 October, 2008 at 7:34 a.m. ( Suggest removal )
Platypus will be killed? Go home and cry! That's precisely what then Environment Minister Desley Boyle told protesters in Maleny before Woolworths dug 1m wide concrete pylons through a proven platypus habitat.
on 10 October, 2008 at 2:06 p.m. ( Suggest removal )
"the EPA hold little hope of finding the culprits" - really? There are identifying marks on the net for certain. If a human body had been found in it, the culprit would be arrested. Pity the unprotected.

It is not important to State Government authorities that playtpus are killed in the Obi, in the Mary River or at Traveston. I have three letters on Queensland Government letterhead pointing out that while the platypus are an important icon, they are not endangered and thus not protected.

Good enough for the Woolworths site in Maleny to be excavated - worthless enough for the EPA to wash its hands of platypus deaths by gill netting the Obi. It is now time to make them accountable.
on 30 October, 2008 at 4:46 p.m. ( Suggest removal )
I agree with all of your comments! It is abhorrent that illegal & unneccessary native animal deaths occur at the hands of irresponsible people & it is Macquarie with Sea-turtles...what can we do to help creatures without voices? I feel very helpless & hopeless that things will change for the wildlife.I emplore all naturelovers to get amongst the real world of nature & record it for our kid's kids :~(

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