Los Angeles Times

Off Mexico, perhaps only 8 rare porpoises remain

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MEXICO CITY — Scientists estimate that only about eight of the world’s most critically endangered porpoises may remain in the Gulf of California, the only place where the vaquita marina lives, an environmen­tal group said this week.

Pritam Singh, chairman of the Sea Shepherd group, said its crews had not seen any of the elusive porpoises during about three dozen trips this year to what is believed to be the last area in the gulf where vaquitas live.

But he said scientists from the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature reviewed images taken late last year that suggest eight adults and perhaps one or two calves are still in the gulf, also known as the Sea of Cortez.

Vaquitas drown in illegal nets set by fishermen to catch totoaba, a fish whose swim bladder is a delicacy in China and sells for thousands of dollars per pound.

The Mexican government has been criticized for partially giving up on efforts to enforce a zero-fishing zone in the last known area of the gulf where vaquitas live. But Singh said that while there were a lot of small fishing boats in the zero-fishing area early this year, coordinati­on between Sea Shepherd and the Mexican navy has helped cut down on the vessels.

Singh said that the first three days Sea Shepherd patrolled the area this year, its crew sighted 58 fishing boats on the first day, 35 the second and 27 on the third. During its most recent trip, those numbers were down to between one and three boats per day, he said.

“That is great news,” Singh said. “That helps to give the vaquita a chance.”

Last year, the Mexican government abandoned the policy of maintainin­g a “zero tolerance” zone in the upper gulf. It then introduced a sliding scale of punishment­s if more than 60 fishing boats are seen in the area on multiple occasions.

For years, Mexico relied on Sea Shepherd boats to remove most of the illegal nets that trap and drown vaquitas, while doing relatively little to combat violent attacks by poachers on the environmen­talists’ ships. The group estimates it removed about 1,000 of the long, heavy nets over the last six years.

But the environmen­talists were forced to leave the gulf in January 2021 after a New Year’s Eve attack in which fishermen rammed a Sea Shepherd vessel with their boat. One of the fishermen later reportedly died of injuries sustained in that attack.

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