Brazilian
officials destroy rare fish specimens
Paulo
Rebêlo
25 August 2004
Source: SciDev.Net
RECIFE. Inspectors from Brazil's Ministry of Agriculture have destroyed
twelve specimens of marine rays that had been borrowed from an institute
in Spain, alleging that they lacked the necessary paperwork to be
brought into the country — and refusing to postpone their
action to allow such paperwork to be prepared.
Similar events have occurred in the past, leading to growing concern
among Brazilian researchers that such actions will make it more
difficult to borrow biological samples from foreign scientists and
their institutions.
The specimens were rare African rays belonging to the Spanish Institute
of Oceanography that had been borrowed by Marcelo Carvalho, an evolutionary
biologist from the São Paulo University (USP). Three belonged
to uncatalogued species.
Carvalho had been attending a workshop in Spain sponsored by the
Spanish government and the UN Food and Agriculture Organization,
at which more than 50 specialists had gathered to put together a
guide of marine fauna in the African west coast.
Inspectors seized the fish on Carvalho's re-entry into Brazil, claiming
that they lacked the required paperwork from Brazil's Sanitary Department.
Carvalho and friends from State University of Rio de Janeiro (UERJ)
went to the Ministry of Agriculture seeking an agreement that the
specimens would not be destroyed until they had gathered the appropriate
documents. But when they got back to the airport, it was too late.
"Those specimens were very unique and rare," says Carvalho.
"Of the ten specimens, at least three were completely unknown
by science and now will remain so. It's distressing not only for
Brazil, but for the whole science community."
Similar incidents have occurred in the past, generating concern
among Brazilian researchers that international research centres
may become reluctant to loan or give them biological samples.
For several years, the US Smithsonian Institute had placed a temporary
moratorium on shipping specimens back and forth between its research
centres and Brazil. Leonard Hirsch, senior policy advisor for the
Smithsonian, explains that Brazilian regulations were uncertain
for a long time. However, he believes they have recently "been
moving forward in a very positive way".
"We have been working very hard with the Brazilians, and believe
we can now move specimens back and forth again," he says.
Hirsch was critical of the destruction of Carvalho’s rays.
"From the report, I find it totally unacceptable that they
destroyed specimens not of Brazilian origin rather than holding
them or having them taken out of the country, " he told SciDev.Net.
In 2002, 200 samples of blood from a Brazilian bird, the Ramphocelus
bresilius, belonging to Denise Nogueira of UERJ were destroyed.
Nogueira had gone to the United Kingdom for part of her doctoral
studies, taking the blood specimens with her accompanied by full
documentation from the Brazilian Institute of Environment (IBAMA).
"I had no problems leaving the country or entering England,"
she says. "But when I came back, nine months later, an employee
from the Agriculture Ministry said that I had left Brazil illegally,
as I didn't have a license from the ministry to carry material from
an animal source."
The IBAMA employee who released the material didn't know Nogueira
would need another license from the Agriculture Ministry. The blood
specimens were confiscated and stored at the airport. They were
burned a few days later, before she was able to obtain documents
for their release.
In an open letter to the government, Ennio Candotti, president of
the Brazilian Society for the Advancement of Science (SBPC), points
out that the destruction of the marine samples has taken place at
a time when the Brazilian government has indicated a commitment
to reducing bureaucratic controls on science in order to stimulate
its development
In June, for example, the country announced an easing of important
restrictions on scientific equipment in response to demands from
researchers to cut the amount of bureaucracy involved in bringing
such equipment into Brazil (see Brazil eases rules on scientific
imports).
"It's absurd to have two different institutions regulating
the same thing when they don't communicate with each other. They
burn material without any information on its importance and don't
let us even try to comply with their bureaucracy. The government
pays us to research, collect and store; the same government is paying
people to burn these materials," says Denise.
Suêldo Vita, executive-secretary from the Support Foundation
of Development at the Federal University of Pernambuco, deals with
these problems every day, and says current regulations "really
don't ease the procedures of science and research". He manages
donations from foreign universities and the researchers' requests
for imports. "The current Brazilian legislation really doesn't
help much and it's quite difficult for a foreign institution to
understand why our researchers have to follow so many bureaucratic
steps," he says.
He suggests that current laws should be revised to ease the process
for everyone involved and to improve Brazil's scientific progress.
So far, the Brazilian Ministry of Agriculture has not issued a statement
regarding the destruction of Carvalho's rays.
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