China Daily Global Edition (USA)
Endangered seal population rises
The population of Hawaiian monk seals — one of the world’s most critically endangered marine mammals — has been increasing 3 percent a year for the past three years, federal wildlife officials said.
There are now about 1,400 of the seals in the wild, said Charles Littnan, lead scientist of the Hawaiian Monk Seal Research Program at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
“This is phenomenal, hopeful news for the population,” Littnan said on Tuesday. “Yet we have a long way to go to recovery.”
The population has experienced increases in the past, including the mid-2000s, but Littnan characterized those as minor blips.
Hawaiian monk seals declined innumbersfor years, most recently as juveniles struggled to compete for food with large fish and sharks in the remote Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, a mostly uninhabited stretch of tiny atolls that includesMidway.
Sharksalso attackedrecentlyweanedseals atFrenchFrigate Shoals, one of the chain’s most pristine atolls.
At one point, only one in five juveniles in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands lived to adulthood.
Littnan said more juveniles are now surviving in part because ofprogramslike
population of Hawaiian monk seals— one of theworld’s most critically endangered marine mammals.
those that disentangle seals from marine debris and take malnourished young seals to a Big Island seal hospital to nurse them back to health.
Littnan says about 30 percent ofHawaiian monk seals are alive today because of the programs.
El Nino
He also attributed the rebound to broader environmental changes, such as El Nino, which is a periodic warming of parts of the Pacific that changes weather globally. El Nino patterns can help boost the food supply for the seals that eat squid, eels, crab and other marine life.
The monk seal population had been declining since the 1950s, when federal authorities counted 3,400 seals on northwestern Hawaiian beaches. Federal officials want to return the population to that level.
Littnan cautioned that the population increase could shift radically. “This should be a bright spark, a glimmer of hope, that thing that fuels conservation. It shouldn’t breed complacency,” he said.