Cape Breton Post

Making it right

Bid to reduce whale deaths has been ‘extremely effective:’ Canada

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A year after the population of critically endangered North Atlantic right whales suffered devastatin­g losses, Canadian officials say measures taken this season to protect the species have worked.

With the summer fishing season in the Gulf of St. Lawrence drawing to a close, the Fisheries Department confirmed Friday that not one whale has died as a result of a ship strike or fishing gear entangleme­nt - the main causes for most of the deaths last season.

In all, 17 right whales died last year - 12 of them in Canadian waters - prompting concerns that the population might be on the fast track toward extinction.

The federal government responded with a series of protection measures, which included speed restrictio­ns for boats, increased surveillan­ce and a series of closures of fishing areas where right whales were spotted.

Some of the measures were unpopular with fishermen, but Fisheries Department spokesman Adam Burns said they were “extremely effective.’’

There are believed to be fewer than 450 North Atlantic right whales remaining and, of those, only about 100 breeding females.

In all, 135 individual whales were spotted this summer in the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence, compared with 114 confirmed sightings last year. However, no calves were seen, a troubling developmen­t that has raised new concerns about the fate of these massive mammals.

Meanwhile, the protection measures remain in place because some whales were recently spotted in the Gulf, as well as the Roseway Basin off the southweste­rn Nova Scotia and the Grand Manan Basin in the Bay of Fundy.

The restrictio­ns won’t be lifted until the whales return to their wintering grounds farther south, Burns said.

“We recognize that these measures had a real impact on fish harvesters and for processors in coastal communitie­s,’’ he said. “It hasn’t been without a cost.’’

In June, a fishermen’s group took aim at a fisheries closure in the Bay of Fundy, saying the move was an overreacti­on because only one whale had been seen in the Grand Manan Basin.

That closure and others affected fixed-gear fishermen with licences to fish for lobster, crab, groundfish, herring and mackerel. Snow crab fishermen in the Gulf were also affected by the rolling closures.

Burns said federal officials have already started getting ready for next season, with a series of consultati­on sessions planned with fishing industry representa­tives slated for this fall in Atlantic Canada and Quebec.

And in November, a committee of marine mammal experts will review scientific data that should provide a clearer picture of the whales’ distributi­on in the region.

Fisheries officials are also taking part in pilot projects aimed at testing fishing gear that could reduce the number of entangleme­nts.

On Aug. 5, the Campobello Whale Rescue Team managed to free an entangled North Atlantic right whale that had been spotted in the Bay of Fundy a week earlier. The whale, identified as an adult male, had an orange buoy trailing behind it.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? A North Atlantic right whale appears at the surface of Cape Cod bay off the coast of Plymouth, Mass., on March 28, 2018. A year after the population of critically endangered North Atlantic right whales suffered devastatin­g losses, Canadian officials say measures taken this season to save the species have worked.
CP PHOTO A North Atlantic right whale appears at the surface of Cape Cod bay off the coast of Plymouth, Mass., on March 28, 2018. A year after the population of critically endangered North Atlantic right whales suffered devastatin­g losses, Canadian officials say measures taken this season to save the species have worked.

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