Santa Cruz Sentinel

Marine commission: Whale deaths not linked to wind prep work

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ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. >> An independen­t scientific agency that advises the federal government on policies that could impact marine mammals said there is no evidence linking site preparatio­n work for offshore wind farms with a number of whale deaths along the U.S. East Coast.

In a statement released Tuesday, the Marine Mammal Commission became the third federal agency to reject a link between the deaths and the offshore wind energy industry, despite a growing narrative among offshore wind opponents that probing the ocean floor to prepare for wind turbine projects is killing whales.

Last month, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion and the U.S. Bureau of Ocean Energy Management said there is no evidence linking offshore wind developmen­t with whale deaths.

The commission said 16 humpback whales and at least one critically endangered North Atlantic right whale have washed ashore dead on the East Coast this winter.

“Despite several reports in the media, there is no evidence to link these strandings to offshore wind energy developmen­t,” the commission said.

The deaths are part of an “unusual mortality event” involving humpback whales declared by the National Marine Fisheries Service in 2016. The agency said 40% of the whales that could be examined at necropsy, or postmortem, showed evidence of a ship strike or entangleme­nt with fishing gear. Others were floating at sea or otherwise inaccessib­le.

The commission said the number of whale strandings is not unusual. Ten or more humpback whales have stranded each year since 2016, with a high of 34 in 2017, it added.

It said the number of whales in the northeast is growing, something other agencies have noted as well. As the population grows, more whales are choosing to spend the winter in the northeast, where they are more vulnerable to being struck by ships or entangled in fishing gear, instead of migrating to warmer areas.

On Feb. 12, a dead North Atlantic right whale washed ashore in Virginia Beach, Virginia. It was a 20-yearold, 43-foot male.

A necropsy was conducted by numerous state and city agencies and a private stranding response program, determinin­g that the whale suffered a catastroph­ic blunt force traumatic injury, impacting its spine. The injuries, which are consistent with those often found in animals that have been struck by ships, included multiple vertebral fractures that would have resulted in death shortly after the injury.

Today, there are fewer than 350 North Atlantic right whales in existence, with fewer than 95 mature females in the population. An unusual mortality event was declared for these animals in 2017.

The commission's report comes as offshore wind opponents are pushing for investigat­ions into whether offshore wind is killing whales, even though the federal government has been investigat­ing whale deaths since 2016.

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