The Welland Tribune

Sealers’ group calls for hike in seal hunt — possible cull

- SUE BAILEY

ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — Hungry East Coast seal population­s have surged in recent decades, spurring calls for an increased seal hunt — and even a possible cull — to protect fragile capelin and northern cod stocks.

“If you don’t protect the ecosystem in controllin­g some of the top predators in the food chain, then something’s going to go out of whack,” said Eldred Woodford, president of the Canadian Sealers Associatio­n.

The Northwest Atlantic harp seal population is estimated at about 7.4 million animals — almost six times what it was in the 1970s, according to the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans.

Grey seal numbers in the Gulf of St. Lawrence have grown from about 5,000 animals in 1960 to an estimated 98,000 in 2014, according to the department.

The number of commercial sealing licences, meanwhile, has plunged in Newfoundla­nd to

4,558 last year from 11,146 in 2009, say preliminar­y federal statistics.

It’s time the federal government considered a cull on seals, Woodford said in an interview.

“Certainly we’re going to have to start entertaini­ng it and looking at it.”

Woodford said he never wanted to promote the practice of killing harp or grey seals outright for the sake of limiting their respective effects on capelin and northern cod stocks.

“I felt it would be a shame to destroy a natural, renewable resource for the sole fact of controllin­g the population. We should be controllin­g it with a commercial activity where the people could utilize the animals and gain some benefit from the resource.”

Only about 70,000 harp seals were landed from the 2017 quota of 400,000, Woodford said, a trend of low harvests over the last several years. The price has hovered around $35 for the highest quality pelts, far below heady values of three times that much seen before internatio­nal markets dried up over the last 15 years.

Federal Fisheries Minister Dominic LeBlanc is expected to make an announceme­nt soon on the northern cod fishery. Stocks collapsed off Newfoundla­nd and Labrador before a sweeping commercial moratorium threw thousands of people out of work in 1992. They had been slowly recovering but the latest updates suggest a 30-per-cent drop over last year.

Fishermen have long complained that grey seals rely on cod for a good portion of their diets, while harp seals eat vast amounts of capelin — the small fish that help sustain cod and several other species.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada