Montreal Gazette

Big seal cull suggested to help cod stocks

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OTTAWA — A Senate committee says Ottawa should approve a cull of 70,000 seals off Canada’s East Coast in a controvers­ial four-year experiment aimed at helping the recovery of cod stocks.

The committee has spent almost a year studying a federal proposal to slaughter up to 70 per cent of the grey seal population in the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence, a plan critics say has been driven by politics, not science.

The committee is also recommendi­ng some kind of bounty system to compensate hunters, but it didn’t say how much the bounty should be. There is no market for grey seal pelts.

Acting Fisheries Minister Gail Shea is under pressure from the fishing industry to do something about the stunted cod recovery in the Gulf.

The cod in the area are on the verge of disappeari­ng even though large-scale commercial fishing has been banned there since the early 1990s.

“The committee is persuaded by the demonstrat­ion that seal predation is preventing the recovery of groundfish stocks in the southern Gulf of St. Lawrence,” the committee said in its report, made public Tuesday.

“While acknowledg­ing the ecological risks raised by some witnesses, the committee supports the logic of the proposed experiment­al reduction of grey seals in this area.”

However, leading biologists and animal welfare groups have condemned the proposal, saying there’s no scientific evidence to suggest a cull would work.

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