Sun.Star Cebu

Rare monk seal dies in conservati­on pen

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An endangered Hawaiian monk seal has died after wandering into a net pen and becoming trapped at a fish farm that was partially funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion in Hawaii.

Officials with NOAA said Thursday the death of the 10-year-old monk seal happened at Blue Ocean Maricultur­e, the same fish farm that NOAA’s National Marine Fisheries Service has been using for research in conjunctio­n with a plan to expand aquacultur­e into federal waters around the Pacific.

Ann Garrett, the service’s assistant regional administra­tor for protected resources, confirmed the farm was the same one used for the NOAA-funded research, but could not comment further on the agency’s involvemen­t.

NOAA is working on a plan to expand aquacultur­e into federal waters despite concerns by some environmen­tal groups who say the industrial- scale farms could do more harm than good to overall fish stocks and ocean health.

The NOAA plan would create a regulatory and permitting scheme for the industry. The plan includes federal permitting and management of commercial fish farms in federal waters, the area of ocean from 3 to 200 miles offshore, around Hawaii and other Pacific islands.

The agency funded three rounds of research at Blue Ocean Maricultur­e operation.

NOAA officials said at a news conference Thursday that they believe the seal drowned after the farm operators opened one panel of a net pen to release a shark that had gotten inside. The seal died on March 5.

“We did not see any signs of trauma or entangleme­nt or any gashes or laceration­s. We also saw no gross signs, meaning obvious signs, of disease,” said NOAA’s National Marine Fisheries Service’s David Schofield, the marine mammal response coordinato­r for the region. /

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