The Hamilton Spectator

No reported right whale deaths in Canadian waters so far in 2018

- KEITH DOUCETTE

HALIFAX — There have been no reported deaths of North Atlantic right whales in Canadian waters this year — with dozens of the endangered mammals spotted amid strict fishing and vessel speed restrictio­ns, federal officials say.

There were 12 whale deaths last year in Canadian waters, half of those in June.

“Earlier in the year, there was a report in the United States of one (death) ... but in Canadian waters, there have been none,” said Adam Burns, director general of fisheries resource management at the Department of Fisheries and Oceans.

At least 18 right whales have been found dead overall in Canadian and U.S. waters since 2017, likely due to rope entangleme­nts and ship collisions.

DFO said Thursday that aerial surveillan­ce had so far detected at least 75 whales in the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence.

“This number likely underestim­ates the total number of right whales that may be present in the southern Gulf or in Canadian waters at this time,” said Jean Landry, the department’s director of marine mammal science.

Landry said observers had logged 371 flying hours since early April, more than last year’s total by science aircraft.

Meanwhile, DFO has temporaril­y closed 4,600 square kilometres of the Gulf and another 780 square kilometres in the Roseway Basin off Nova Scotia’s southern coast to non-tended fixed gear fisheries such as snow crab and lobster.

The closures have drawn the ire of some lobster fishermen, who say the latest closures have squeezed them into tight proximity in zones that are already heavily fished.

Nearly 500 brought empty lobster traps to Caraquet, N.B., on Thursday to protest against the continuing closures. They created a wall of traps outside a building where Acadie-Bathurst Liberal MP Serge Cormier has an office.

But with the lobster and snow crab seasons set to wrap up at the end of this month, Burns said DFO isn’t about to relent on urgent measures, given the unpreceden­ted number of right whale deaths last year.

“These measures have a real impact on fish harvesters, processors, and communitie­s in Atlantic Canada; however, the longterm economic risks of not adequately protecting North Atlantic right whales is greater,” Burns said.

Groups such as the Maritime Fishermen’s Union and the Pecheurs profession­nels du Sud de la Gaspesie have said frustratio­n is mounting after Fisheries Minister Dominic LeBlanc decided not to exempt waters up to 10 fathoms deep from the closures.

LeBlanc has said he isn’t insensitiv­e to fishermen’s concerns, and Ottawa is considerin­g ways to alleviate the economic hardship.

That includes measures to help processing plant workers qualify for employment insurance, and a possible fall opening of the lobster fishery to make up for lost days.

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