Albuquerque Journal

Whale rescue effort ends for now

Length of suspension undecided following death of a rescuer

- THE WASHINGTON POST

The United States is temporaril­y halting efforts to rescue large whales trapped in fishing gear after the death of a Canadian fisherman this week.

Joe Howlett, founder of the Campobello Whale Rescue Team, was killed Monday after freeing a trapped North Atlantic right whale off the coast of New Brunswick, a Canadian province next to Maine. Details about how he was killed were slim, but Mackie Greene, captain of the whale rescue group, told the Canadian Press that the whale “made a big flip” after it was freed and somehow struck Howlett.

It’s unknown how long the suspension will stay in place.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion is “suspending all large whale entangleme­nt response activities nationally until further notice, in order to review our own emergency response protocols in light of this event,” Kate Brogan, spokeswoma­n for the NOAA fisheries division, said in a statement.

Howlett, described as “one of the few certified whale disentangl­ement experts in Canada,” founded a volunteer group that responds to dozens of reports of whales trapped in fishing gear off the coast of New Brunswick. He had been on a “fast response vessel” belonging to Fisheries and Oceans Canada when the incident occurred, according to a statement from the agency.

What the suspension means for nonprofit entities authorized by the United States and Canada to rescue trapped whales is unclear.

One such group is the Massachuse­tts-based Center for Coastal Studies, a marine research nonprofit that worked with Howlett on rescue efforts. Spokeswoma­n Cathrine Macort told the Bangor Daily News that Howlett is the first such person killed since the 1970s, when the United States and Canada started a network of government­al and nonprofit groups from both countries that respond to whale entangleme­nts.

How the suspension might affect North Atlantic right whales is also unclear.

Hunted heavily by commercial whalers in the 1900s, the animals are considered among the world’s most endangered large whale species, according to the Marine Mammal Commission. Today, they’re killed or injured primarily because of entangleme­nts in fishing nets and strikes by vessels.

Only about 500 of the animals are left in the world, according to Fisheries and Oceans Canada.

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