Statistically, fishing is one of the world's most dangerous
professions, and it is hard to imagine what
could be worse than scuba diving for lobster along the
remote, impoverished Miskito Coast of Honduras and
Nicaragua. The dangers of this profession have been
graphically documented. According to Smithsonian
marine biologist Stephen Box, who has been working
with the Miskito community, there are about 3,500
people who depend on the lobster fishery for their livelihoods,
of which it is estimated that 1,300 are divers. Box
estimates that scuba diving for lobster results in about
120 cases of decompression sickness per year, of which
around 20 are fatal.
In 2009, as part of a Central American-wide agreement,
governments acknowledged the human and environmental
damage resulting from this fishery, and committed
to ban scuba diving for lobster by 2011. That was later extended to July 1, 2013 to allow Honduras and
Nicaragua, the last two countries still using scuba diving
in that capacity, more time to transition the fishing communities
to better practices and alternative livelihoods.
Unfortunately, last month, despite having already
developed a national transition plan, the Nicaraguan
legislature voted to override the regional agreement,
and extend scuba diving for lobster for three more years.
During this time, they could continue to transition away
from diving to other fishing practices and alternative
livelihoods, but skeptics fear there is now a track record
of postponement, and in the meantime the divers will
keep getting bent, paralyzed and die as they try to survive
in the poorest and most forgotten part of Central
America. Now all eyes have turned to the government
of Honduras...
For the rest of this in-depth story, written by Miguel Jorge
for National Geographic's "Ocean Views" blog, go to http://newswatch.nationalgeographic.com/2013/04/23/time-for-honduras-to-end-scuba-diving-for-lobster/