Medicine Hat News

Ottawa modifies North Atlantic right whale protection measures for 2021

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The federal Fisheries Department will continue efforts this year to protect endangered North Atlantic right whales in Canadian waters, but it is making some changes to reduce the impact on the fishing industry.

The government announced Thursday it will still close fishing areas when whales are present, but before prolonging such a closure, authoritie­s plan to step up surveillan­ce to determine whether the whales remain.

When a right whale is detected in an area, it is closed to lobster and crab fishers for 15 days. Starting this year, a whale would have to be detected again between the ninth and 15th day for that closure to be extended.

The news was welcomed by Jean Lanteigne, general manager of the Federation Regionale Acadienne, which represents crab fishermen in northeaste­rn New Brunswick.

“It is good news,” Lanteigne said in an interview. “I think our argument has been heard by the department.”

Lanteigne said it didn’t make sense to close an area for the entire season if the whales were just briefly passing through. “We can now follow the path of the whales more closely. It is our fourth year of observatio­n and we have a better understand­ing of where they want to go,” he said.

“The fishing season is short. It is basically eight to 10 weeks, so if you close for 15 days, that’s already a long time,” Lanteigne added.

In the Bay of Fundy and the Roseway and Grand Manan basins, if a whale is detected during days nine to 15, the area will be closed for an additional 15 days. But in the Gulf of

St. Lawrence, a second such sighting will result in a season-long closure.

Again this year, the government’s monitoring program will include multiple aircraft, a drone, on-the-water vessel surveillan­ce and underwater hydrophone­s.

Tonya Wimmer, director of conservati­on group Marine Animal Response Society, said the government’s new strategy hasn’t changed much from last year.

“It allows a bit of risk, but with what we’ve seen in the data over the last year or so, hopefully we’ll be OK, and it provides a bit of relief for the industry to be able to keep fishing,” Wimmer said in an interview Thursday.

There were no North Atlantic right whale deaths or entangleme­nts in fishing gear in Canadian waters in 2020, but in the previous five years, 25 deaths were recorded. It is estimated there are only 366 of the animals remaining in the world.

“Last season is proof that by working together, we can effectivel­y protect North Atlantic right whales, while also continuing to put high-quality, sustainabl­e seafood on dinner plates in Canada and around the world,” Fisheries Minister Bernadette Jordan said in a statement Thursday.

Two whale calves have been reported dead in Florida so far this year, including one last Saturday that washed ashore on a beach near St. Augustine.

Wimmer said that leaves about 14 calves that will hopefully migrate north this year.

Restrictio­ns on ship speeds will remain in place throughout much of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, while fishing vessels will have an exemption in waters less than 20 fathoms, or 37 metres, deep.

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