Ottawa announces $26M for research to help right whales
HALIFAX• Sound-seeking gliders will cruise the habitats of North Atlantic right whales in a bid to capture their calls and learn more about how noises in the ocean may affect the health of the endangered species.
The federal government said Friday it will spend $26.6 million on research to help better understand noise pressures on marine mammals, including right whales, southern resident killer whales and St. Lawrence Estuary belugas, among others.
Scientists said the funding will help create a fuller picture of the ecosystem where the whales migrate and what effect sounds have on their stress levels, as well as their ability to feed and mate.
“It’s really important to do the research, because if you don’t know where the right whales are, you can’t protect them,” Andrew Wright, a marine biologist at the Bedford Institute of Oceanography, said at the announcement in Halifax.
“We haven’t yet gotten to the point where we understand what effect (sound) has on the right whales and other marine mammals, so this is applying new technologies to answer some of these questions.”
Darren Fisher, a Halifaxarea MP, made the announcement at Halifax’s Bedford Institute of Oceanography. The Fisheries Department said the research will help identify how to reduce the impacts of noise stressors on whales and other marine species.
“Establishing baseline data of environmental noise is important in understanding and quantifying noise levels that human activities are contributing to our oceans,” said Fisher.
“Underwater noise, collisions with ships and other disturbances, scarcity of food and contaminants all threaten their very existence.”
The department said the initial focus will be to better understand the effects of shipping-related noise on marine mammals.
As part of the initiative, Dalhousie University will receive $635,000 to support its monitoring of the North Atlantic right whales in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and Roseway Basin, off southern Nova Scotia.