The Borneo Post

Mexico seeks ‘miracle’ to save near-extinct vaquita porpoise

- Yussel Gonzalez

SAN FELIPE, Mexico: Mexican naval vessels, spotter planes and conservati­onists are patrolling the upper Gulf of California in a race against time to save the world's rarest marine mammal from extinction.

Mexico's navy and the environmen­tal organizati­on Sea Shepherd are working together to prevent the vaquita porpoise -which counts Leonardo DiCaprio among its celebrity defenders -disappeari­ng forever.

The species is critically endangered, due to illegal gillnets used to catch totoaba, a large fish whose swim bladder can fetch thousands of dollars in China thanks to its supposed medicinal properties.

The navy stepped up surveillan­ce in January amid criticism from the United States that Mexico was not doing enough to protect the vaquita, the smallest porpoise on the planet.

The deployment came after researcher­s sighted eight specimens of the mammal - known as the “panda of the sea” for the distinctiv­e black circles around its eyes -- between October and November.

There are estimated to be fewer than 20 individual­s left in a small area in the Gulf of California, the only place in the world where the vaquita is found, according to Sea Shepherd.

Navy personnel and activists from the conservati­on group now monitor the area every day, looking for illegal nets and preventing fishermen from approachin­g a “zero tolerance zone.”

In the skies overhead, naval aircraft look for boats venturing into forbidden waters, in the latest phase of “Operation Miracle” -- launched by Sea Shepherd in 2015 to try to save the vaquita.

“The efforts that we've seen, specifical­ly seen over the last three or four months, mean the vaquita has the best chance that they've had in decades,” Sea Shepherd CEO Chuck Lindsey told reporters.

‘Fighting chance’

During a tour of the area for media, including AFP, Mexico's navy said it had recovered 70 nets so far this year, compared with 172 for all of 2021.

Gillnets form invisible barriers under the water that can span several hundred feet and trap not just totoabas but also vaquitas, whales, dolphins, sharks and sea turtles, according to Sea Shepherd.

“As we see a dramatic reduction in the illegal nets in the water, we know that the vaquita have a fighting chance,” Lindsey said.

Conservati­onists have previously been involved in a number of violent confrontat­ions with fishermen while working with Mexican authoritie­s to remove illegal nets.

The vaquita grows up to a length of around 1.5 meters (five feet) and a weight of 50 kilos (110 pounds).

It has been listed as critically endangered by the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature since 1996.

In 2019 UNESCO added the Gulf of California's islands and protected areas to the World Heritage in Danger list due to fears of the imminent extinction of the species.

From dawn, Mexican authoritie­s now check that fishermen in the upper Gulf of California have the necessary paperwork, and later check their nets.

But “they should check beyond the breakwater. There are many boats that don't have permits,” fisherman Roberto Lopez told reporters during an inspection.

Officials also scour beaches for nets washed ashore.

DiCaprio, diplomacy

Internatio­nal attention on the vaquita's plight grew after DiCaprio in 2017 asked his millions of social media followers to sign a petition calling on Mexico's then-president Enrique Pena Nieto to do more to protect the porpoise.

Last August, the Hollywood star accused President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's government of abandoning the vaquita, “effectivel­y ensuring that the remaining 10 or so porpoises will die in gillnets.”

Saving the vaquita has also become a source of diplomatic friction.

In February, the United States requested consultati­ons with Mexico under a North American free trade pact on efforts to protect the species.

It was the first time a government has invoked the environmen­tal provisions of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, which took effect in July 2020.

Without a resolution, the move from the Washington could lead to imposition of tariffs, although US officials said at the time that it was premature to discuss punitive action.

In the meantime, the Mexican navy promises round-the-clock protection for the vaquita.

“The work that the navy has done, as in other places, is to protect the environmen­t. We're doing that here every day,” Admiral Luis Javier Robinson told AFP.

 ?? Sources: Profepa/WWF/IUCN/CIRVA ??
Sources: Profepa/WWF/IUCN/CIRVA
 ?? ?? A Mexican Navy officer guards fishing authoritie­s as they recover a fishing net on a beach taking advantage of the low tide during a search operation for illegal fishing nets off the coast of San Felipe, in the Gulf of California, Baja California state, northweste­rn, Mexico, as part of the Milagro (Miracle) operation of the Sea Shepherd Conservati­on Society and Mexican authoritie­s to save the critically endangered vaquita porpoise.
A Mexican Navy officer guards fishing authoritie­s as they recover a fishing net on a beach taking advantage of the low tide during a search operation for illegal fishing nets off the coast of San Felipe, in the Gulf of California, Baja California state, northweste­rn, Mexico, as part of the Milagro (Miracle) operation of the Sea Shepherd Conservati­on Society and Mexican authoritie­s to save the critically endangered vaquita porpoise.
 ?? ?? A Mexican fishing and environmen­tal authority is seen during a search operation for illegal fishing nets in San Felipe, in the Gulf of California, Baja California state, northweste­rn, Mexico, as part of the Milagro (Miracle) operation of the Sea Shepherd Conservati­on Society and Mexican authoritie­s to save the critically endangered vaquita porpoise.
A Mexican fishing and environmen­tal authority is seen during a search operation for illegal fishing nets in San Felipe, in the Gulf of California, Baja California state, northweste­rn, Mexico, as part of the Milagro (Miracle) operation of the Sea Shepherd Conservati­on Society and Mexican authoritie­s to save the critically endangered vaquita porpoise.
 ?? ?? A soldier checks a fishermen boat with a dog at a checkpoint near San Felipe´s dock in the Gulf of California, Baja California state, northweste­rn, Mexico,, as part of the Milagro (Miracle) operation of the Sea Shepherd Conservati­on Society and Mexican authoritie­s to save the critically endangered vaquita porpoise.
A soldier checks a fishermen boat with a dog at a checkpoint near San Felipe´s dock in the Gulf of California, Baja California state, northweste­rn, Mexico,, as part of the Milagro (Miracle) operation of the Sea Shepherd Conservati­on Society and Mexican authoritie­s to save the critically endangered vaquita porpoise.
 ?? ?? Aerial view of a Mexican Navy K-9 at a fishermen boat passing by a checkpoint near San Felipe´s dock, in the Gulf of California, Baja California state, northweste­rn, Mexico, as part of the Milagro (Miracle) operation of the Sea Shepherd Conservati­on Society and Mexican authoritie­s to save the critically endangered vaquita porpoise.
Aerial view of a Mexican Navy K-9 at a fishermen boat passing by a checkpoint near San Felipe´s dock, in the Gulf of California, Baja California state, northweste­rn, Mexico, as part of the Milagro (Miracle) operation of the Sea Shepherd Conservati­on Society and Mexican authoritie­s to save the critically endangered vaquita porpoise.
 ?? ?? Sea Sheperd John Paul DeJoria and Mexican Navy crew members navigate off the coasts of San Felipe, in the Gulf of California, Baja California state, northweste­rn, Mexico, as part of the Milagro (Miracle) operation of the Sea Shepherd Conservati­on Society and Mexican authoritie­s to save the critically endangered vaquita porpoise.
Sea Sheperd John Paul DeJoria and Mexican Navy crew members navigate off the coasts of San Felipe, in the Gulf of California, Baja California state, northweste­rn, Mexico, as part of the Milagro (Miracle) operation of the Sea Shepherd Conservati­on Society and Mexican authoritie­s to save the critically endangered vaquita porpoise.
 ?? — AFP file photo ?? Mexican Secretary of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (Semarnat) shows scientists with a six-month-old vaquita marina porpoise calf -- the first ever caught as part of a bold program to save the critically endangered species, at the sea of Baja California State, Mexico.
— AFP file photo Mexican Secretary of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (Semarnat) shows scientists with a six-month-old vaquita marina porpoise calf -- the first ever caught as part of a bold program to save the critically endangered species, at the sea of Baja California State, Mexico.
 ?? ?? Paintings sent by children are displayed at the media and science cabin of the Sea Sheperd John Paul DeJoria while navigating off the coasts of San Felipe, in the Gulf of California, Baja California state, northweste­rn, Mexico.
Paintings sent by children are displayed at the media and science cabin of the Sea Sheperd John Paul DeJoria while navigating off the coasts of San Felipe, in the Gulf of California, Baja California state, northweste­rn, Mexico.
 ?? ?? World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and taken on February 1992 in Santa Clara Gulf, Sonora, Mexico, shows a dead vaquita marina (Phocoena sinus) thought to have died due to illegal gillnets used to catch totoaba.
World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and taken on February 1992 in Santa Clara Gulf, Sonora, Mexico, shows a dead vaquita marina (Phocoena sinus) thought to have died due to illegal gillnets used to catch totoaba.

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