Times Colonist

Fundy fishery shut over whales

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HALIFAX — A fishermen’s group said the federal government is jumping the gun with a costly fisheries closure in the Bay of Fundy following the sighting of a single North Atlantic right whale.

The Department of Fisheries and Oceans said the area in Grand Manan Basin will be closed to fixed-gear fishing from 11:59 p.m. Thursday until further notice. The closure affects lobster, crab, groundfish, herring and mackerel licences.

But Brian Guptill, president of the Grand Manan Fishermen’s Associatio­n, said the government was too quick to act. “A vessel sees one right whale that is moving, not stopped and feeding, and they shut the fishery down because of that. The airplane was up this morning and couldn’t find a whale anywhere,” he said.

Guptill said DFO should take a more measured approach.

“It’s a matter of the number of whales or number of sightings. If you just see one whale and it’s travelling ... the whale could be gone before you get the traps out of the water,” he said.

Guptill said the closure is costly for 30 to 40 fishermen who will lose the last week of the season in that area.

Ottawa said all gear must be removed before Thursday’s closure, and notice will be given prior to the reopening.

The right whale population suffered 17 losses last year — 12 of them in Canadian waters — likely due to rope entangleme­nts and ship collisions.

Guptill said the government is overlookin­g the effective protection measures that Bay of Fundy fishermen have taken. “We’ve had a right whale mitigation strategy and we’ve been working to have no impact on the whales since 2006. There hasn’t been a known entangleme­nt since that time.”

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