The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

St Andrews study warns of porpoise’s extinction

- CLAIRE WARRENDER cwarrender@thecourier.co.uk

One of the world’s most endangered animals could face extinction within a year if illegal fishing nets continue to be used, researcher­s at St Andrews University have warned.

There may now only be fewer than 10 of the rare vaquita porpoises remaining at the northern tip of the Gulf of California in Mexico, the only place they live.

Estimates in 2016 had put the worldwide population at just 30 but, despite the Mexican government banning the gillnet which causes porpoises to be killed as a bycatch, illegal fishing has continued.

Research published in the peerreview­ed journal Royal Society Open Science has revealed 10 dead vaquita have been found since then and, of those where cause of death could be establishe­d, all had drowned in gillnets.

The vaquita is the world’s smallest cetacean and is the most endangered marine mammal in the world.

Professor Len Thomas, director of the university’s Centre for Research into Ecological and Environmen­tal Modelling, was invited to join an internatio­nal expert panel of ecological statistici­ans to analyse the data.

He said: “The ongoing presence of illegal gillnets despite the emergency ban continues to drive the vaquita towards extinction.

“Immediate management action is required if the species is to be saved.”

Studies have shown alarming declines in numbers of the mammals - by 98.6% since the current monitoring study began in 2011 and by nearly 50% per year since the 2016 study.

The researcher­s’ best estimate is that there were nine animals remaining at the end of the last acoustic survey in August 2018.

 ??  ?? Illegal gillnets can be deadly for the rare vaquita porpoise.
Illegal gillnets can be deadly for the rare vaquita porpoise.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom