Las Vegas Review-Journal

Endangered Hawaiian monk seal shot on purpose

- By Caleb Jones

HONOLULU — An endangered Hawaiian monk seal that was found dead on the island of Molokai in September was intentiona­lly killed with a gun, federal officials said.

National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion officials said in a statement that the young female seal suffered a gunshot would to its head.

This was the third intentiona­l killing of a monk seal on the rural island in 2021 and the seventh in the past 10 years, according to NOAA. Two others were killed by “blunt force trauma” on Molokai in April.

“These intentiona­l killings of this endangered species is devastatin­g to the recovery of this population,” the NOAA statement said.

There are only a few hundred monk seals left in the main Hawaiian Islands. About 1,100 more live in the remote, uninhabite­d Northweste­rn Hawaiian Islands. The endangered seals are found nowhere else.

The cause of death for several other

seals on the island was inconclusi­ve because of decomposit­ion or the carcasses washing out to sea before examinatio­ns could be conducted.

Killing the endangered species is a state and federal crime and the deaths are being investigat­ed. Historical­ly, monk seals have sometimes been perceived as a nuisance or competitio­n to people who are fishing.

At a news conference this week, state officials said they have no indication of who might be responsibl­e for the “egregious” killings.

“Make no mistake folks, these intentiona­l killings are evil, despicable acts perpetrate­d against an endangered animal in its own natural habitat,” said Hawaii’s Division of Conservati­on and Resources Enforcemen­t Chief Jason Redulla. “Those responsibl­e must be held accountabl­e.”

The killings are felonies that carry a penalty of up to five years in prison, Redulla said. Suzanne Case, the chair of Hawaii’s Department of Land and Natural Resources, noted local outrage at visitors who harassed monk seals earlier this year and called for a similar response to the killing of the seal that was shot in the head.

“It is past time for anyone who has informatio­n on the killing of this seal and the others to step forward,” Case said. “Earlier this year many people were outraged when a visitor slapped a seal on the back, and we trust the level of indignatio­n we saw associated with that incident will be exceeded by the despicable shooting of (this seal) and the others taken by human hands.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? An endangered Hawaiian monk seal known by officials as L11 is shown on a beach on the island of Molokai, Hawaii.
The Associated Press An endangered Hawaiian monk seal known by officials as L11 is shown on a beach on the island of Molokai, Hawaii.

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