logo
Find us on
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Skip Navigation Links
logo 9/21/2024 12:49:37 PM     
Fishing gear confirmed as major cause of right whale deaths 
By Kevin Yarr CA Source: CBC News 11/26/2020
Kevin Yarr
A major study looking into the deaths of North Atlantic right whales has found that entanglement in fishing gear has become a leading cause of mortality.

Right whales are critically endangered, with only about 360 remaining in the world's oceans.
 

The study by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute in Massachusetts found that from 1970 to 2009, ship collisions were the leading cause of mortality in the whales. However, from 2010 to 2015, a large majority of deaths were caused by fishing gear.

Michael Moore, a co-author of the study, said the goal was not to point fingers.

"We're interested in how to bridge the gap between the needs of the fishing industry and the North Atlantic right whale species, as much as both have a right to survive and thrive," Moore told Island Morning's host Laura Chapin.

Right whales are prone to entanglement in fishing gear because they often swim close to shore. Traps on the ocean floor are connected by lines to buoys floating on the surface that mark their position.

When the whales swim through an area being fished, they can get caught in the lines. The ropes can cause scarring, and dragging the buoys and traps will sap the whale's energy and hinder its ability to feed.

Even if the whale survives, that can lead to females not being fit enough to become pregnant.

A study that examined all available photographs of North Atlantic right whales taken from 1980 to 2009 found that 83 per cent showed scars caused by ropes or nets, and 59 per cent had been entangled more than once.
New feeding areas

The whales became an issue in the Gulf of St. Lawrence in 2017, when whales started to arrive to feed in the southern gulf, rather than in the Bay of Fundy where they had traditionally been spotted.

Canadian regulators responded with speed limits for ships, whale-spotting patrols, and temporary closures of fisheries when whales were seen in an area.

"It's very complicated and very challenging," Moore said of the response.

"Despite the challenges they've had, especially in 2017 and 2019, I think Canadian federal, provincial [governments] and industry has been really, really responsive and trying very, very hard to make ends meet for both the right whales and the fisheries and the shipping industry."
How to save the whales

The report went on to review potential solutions, including traps designed without lines that run up to the surface.

In these systems, the traps and the lines lie on the bottom. The buoys are either inflatable or weighed down. To retrieve them, fishermen signal them to either inflate the buoy or release the weight.

Moore acknowledges that these systems are more expensive.

But fishermen are already paying the cost of having to occasionally haul their traps up when right whales are known to be passing.

The new systems are currently being tested in both Canadian and U.S. waters.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
4776Criminal probe into Barents chasebbc news2005-11-01UK
4777Fish reveal hidden depthstheguardian2005-04-15UK
4778Scientists call for urgent action to save Atlantic tunatheguardian2005-04-28UK
4779Some fish like it hotabc news2005-04-27NZ
4780Tuna fears exaggeratedstarbulletin2005-04-30US
4781Quarter of Irish sea cod 'illegal'bbc news2005-12-07IE
4782'Splash' R.I.P.; Former World Record Blue Catfish Turns Fins Upunderwatertimes2005-12-09US
4783Risk assessments urged for fish escaping from net-pen aquacultureinnovations-report2005-03-05US
4784How an Israeli scientist changed the piscine worldclevelandjewishnews2005-12-08IL
4785Meghalaya boy discovers a new species of snakehead fishsentinelassam2021-01-05IN
4786"Tube fishways" could safely lift fish up and over damsnewatlas2020-12-22AU
4787Flying isn't necessary to reach some of Ontario's best fishingBrainerd Dispatch2020-11-21CA
4788Kincardine's new leachate treatment plant up and runningkincardinerecord2017-02-26CA
4789Alberta anglers seek protection for North Raven RiverGlobal News2020-12-07CA
4790DFO has a new plan for northern cod stocks. It doesn't include more fishingCBC News2020-12-31CA
4791Effects of COVID on Angling SurveyFish'n Canada2020-12-24CA
4792The Belgian 'hero' who invaded UK fishing watersbbc news2020-12-21UK
4793Construction begins on world’s first 100,000-tonne intelligent fish farming vessel in QingdaoGlobal Times Published2020-12-20CN
4794Highly contaminated fish in Porcupine Lake, test revealsCBC News2020-10-28CA
4795Ban on fish farms in the Discovery Islands called ‘historic’cheknews2020-12-19CA
4796See the fish that will repopulate Michigan waters with native Arctic graylingmlive2020-12-21US
4797For first time in years, chinook salmon spawn in upper Columbia River system The Associated Press2020-12-18CA
4798Atlantic Salmon Caught Near Ketchikansitnews2004-07-24US
4799Cell swap could help conservationbbc news2004-08-05JP
4800On bass lakes, turning a rite of spring into race for a recordcsmonitor2004-04-20CA

214 215 216 191 of [217 - pages.]