четверг, 1 марта 2012 г.
NT: Didgeridoo boom worries environmental authorities
AAP General News (Australia)
04-27-2001
NT: Didgeridoo boom worries environmental authorities
By Rod McGuirk
DARWIN, April 27 AAP - Tourists' insatiable demand for didgeridoos is taking a worrying
toll on Top End bushland.
Northern Territory environment authorities are planning a tagging system to curb the
enormous black market in the indigenous wind instrument.
Didgeridoo sales have boomed around the Sydney Olympics.
Estimates of the numbers of didgeridoos produced reach the hundreds of thousands.
Few are covered by legally required NT Parks and Wildlife Commission (PWC) permits,
said Josh Fornea, a PhD student researching sustainable harvesting.
"To give you some idea, I spoke to a few of the didgeridoo shops in Darwin and one
of them told me they sold 9,000 last year alone," Mr Fornea said today.
"Parks and Wildlife issued permits to make 3,000 didgeridoos across all of the Northern
Territory."
The trade had taken a marked toll on the trees in Jawoyn land surrounding Katherine,
300km south of Darwin, where Mr Fornea has studied for the past few years.
No permits had been issued for the area.
"If you drive off the Stuart Highway a little way, you see literally hundreds of trees
with missing branches or just cut down completely," Mr Fornea said.
The most frequently targeted tree in the area was the eucalyptus phoenicea - a less
common eucalypt which is becoming increasingly scarce due to the illegal trade.
"It seems to be a worsening problem," Mr Fornea said.
"It hit a crescendo with the 2000 Olympics when everyone was scrambling for as many
didgs as they could get, but the trade is still going and getting bigger."
Aborigines were traditionally selective in their search for a tree that had been sufficiently
hollowed by white ants before harvesting.
The modern instrument makers - both black and white - were less selective and used
power tools to hollow out unsuitable wood, Mr Fornea said.
PWC joined Mr Fornea's research in the past year and is now considering developing
a resource management plan that would include a trial tagging system for retail didgeridoos.
"There is no way for us to estimate how many more stems (didgeridoos) have been taken
beyond the 3,000 permitted," PWC scientist Helen Puckey said.
"The tagging system would help us determine how many and where they're coming from."
Mr Fornea said the next step would be a tag of authenticity, Mr Fornea said.
"Hopefully authenticity tags will be introduced to indicate a didgeridoo not only meets
Parks and Wildlife sustainability criteria but it was also harvested or painted by Aboriginal
people," he said.
AAP rmg/jas/de
KEYWORD: DIDGERIDOO
2001 AAP Information Services Pty Limited (AAP) or its Licensors.
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