The Province

More protection added for orcas in peril

Fishing zones to be restricted and boats required to keep distance under new federal rules

- BRENNA OWEN

Expanded protection­s for endangered southern resident killer whales off B.C.’s coast focus on contaminan­ts, noise, physical disturbanc­es and accessibil­ity of chinook salmon, the orca’s prime prey.

The actions announced by several government department­s Thursday include a ban on tourist or whale-watching vessels with over 12 passengers until the end of June, a measure aimed at preventing the spread of COVID-19.

Areas of the Juan de Fuca Strait and southern Gulf Islands will be closed for recreation­al and commercial salmon fisheries, with specific dates announced in June, the federal government said.

All fish harvesters are being asked to voluntaril­y stop fishing within 1,000 metres of orcas in B.C. waters.

Interim sanctuary zones establishe­d last year for the whales off Pender and Saturna islands will be back up from June 1 to the end of November, a month longer than 2019.

Fisheries and Oceans says the population of the southern residents has fluctuated between 70 and 99 whales since 1976, and their small population size and lack of calves means the unique family of orcas is “facing imminent threats to their survival and recovery.”

Andrew Trites, director of the marine mammal research unit at the University of B.C., said the orcas are in real trouble.

“Particular­ly with having so few births, having so few females in the population, having had a couple males dominate breeding, and then just all the added pressures put on the environmen­t,” said Trites, pointing to ocean noise, dwindling fish stocks and the warming ocean.

No vessels will be permitted in sanctuary areas with the exceptions of emergency and Indigenous vessels, while boats are also prohibited from coming within 400 m of any killer whale starting June 1, the federal government said.

There is an exception to that rule in place for whale-watching and tourism companies that receive federal authorizat­ion, allowing them to view all whales except southern residents from 200 metres.

Vessels are also asked to reduce their speed within 1,000 metres of a whale and turn engines to neutral if a whale is within 400 metres, a measure the government said is in place year-round.

Officially, there are 73 southern residents, but the Centre for Whale Research in Washington state said the most prolific male is missing and presumed dead.

The federal government said a technical working group has identified and compiled guidelines for key contaminan­ts affecting whales and their prey.

Terry Beech, a Burnaby MP and parliament­ary secretary for the minister of fisheries, said the government has taken unpreceden­ted steps to protect the southern resident population over four years.

“We’ve shown how far we’re willing to go, and if there are measures that we can continue to take to protect this iconic species, all options are certainly on the table.”

Beech said more decisions about the chinook fishery will be made in the coming weeks.

Trites said it’s good to see the government take steps to create more favourable conditions for the endangered orcas.

The orcas haven’t been seen in the Salish Sea the way they once were, he said.

“It’s not clear if the whales have seen the memo of all the changes that the government has put in place to make things better for them,” he quipped.

 ?? — NORTHWEST FISHERIES SCIENCE CENTER ?? Southern resident killer whales are under threat from many environmen­tal factors and have just a couple of dominant breeding males in the population, says marine mammal researcher Andrew Trites of UBC.
— NORTHWEST FISHERIES SCIENCE CENTER Southern resident killer whales are under threat from many environmen­tal factors and have just a couple of dominant breeding males in the population, says marine mammal researcher Andrew Trites of UBC.

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