Saving Seafood

  • Home
  • News
    • Alerts
    • Conservation & Environment
    • Council Actions
    • Economic Impact
    • Enforcement
    • International & Trade
    • Law
    • Management & Regulation
    • Regulations
    • Nutrition
    • Opinion
    • Other News
    • Safety
    • Science
    • State and Local
  • News by Region
    • New England
    • Mid-Atlantic
    • South Atlantic
    • Gulf of Mexico
    • Pacific
    • North Pacific
    • Western Pacific
  • About
    • Contact Us
    • Fishing Terms Glossary

Are North Atlantic Right Whales Becoming Extinct? Experts Warn About Declining Fertility

February 27, 2018 โ€” The North Atlantic right whales may soon become extinct as no new births have been recorded, experts have warned.

According to a report in the Guardian, the scientists who observed a whale community off the U.S. coast have not recorded any new births in the right whale population. The report also stated that a huge number of right whale deaths were recorded in 2017.

Scientists have, therefore, said that a blend of the rising mortality rate and the declining fertility rate is resulting in the extinction of the right whales. They predicted that at this rate, the whales would become extinct by 2040.

โ€œAt the rate, we are killing them off, this 100 females will be gone in 20 years,โ€ Mark Baumgartner, a marine ecologist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts said adding that the North Atlantic right whales will be functionally extinct by 2040 if no action is undertaken to protect them.

Speaking of North Atlantic whales, Baumgartner said the population of these whales was quite healthy about seven years ago. However, it soon began to decline after lobster fishermen began fishing in the waters.

Read the full story at the International Business Times

 

Maine: 43rd Fishermenโ€™s Forum opens on Thursday

February 27, 2018 โ€” ROCKPORT, Maine โ€” The weathermen may be predicting snow for the weekend but Maine fishermen, or at least the Maine Fishermenโ€™s Forum, say that spring is nearly upon us.

The 43rd annual Maine Fishermenโ€™s Forum gets under way on Thursday at the Samoset Resort in Rockport.

The event features three days of seminars and workshops that bring fishermen from the along the entire New England coast together with: state and federal fisheries scientists, regulators and managers; political incumbents and hopefuls; and maritime enterprises hawking everything from new lobster boats and giant diesel engines to lobster traps, marine electronics, refrigeration systems and foul weather gear.

โ€œThis is our biggest trade show ever,โ€ forum Coordinator Chiloa Young said Monday.

The forum also draws a variety of nonprofit organizations involved in fisheries research and conservation, preservation of working waterfronts and similar marine-related causes.

There is also no shortage of social opportunities, including an opening day seafood reception Thursday evening, the fresh fish dinner on Friday and the final banquet and dinner dance Saturday.

Thursday is Shellfish Day, with programs relating to the economics and business innovation in the shellfish industry.

On Friday, the forum will host programs relating, among other topics, to new herring fishing rules, electronic monitoring of fishing vessels and the increasingly fraught issue of the coexistence of the lobster fishery and endangered right whales. The Maine Lobstermenโ€™s Association will hold its 64th Annual Meeting, and mark the retirement of David Cousens after 27 years as the organizationโ€™s president.

Friday is also the day for political visitors. According to Young, U.S. Sen. Angus King (I-Maine) will be on hand between 9:30 and 11 a.m., Rep. Chellie Pingree (D-Maine) will visit during the morning and Rep. Bruce Poliquin (R-Maine) is planning to attend the fresh fish dinner in the evening.

Read the full story at the Ellsworth American

 

Massachusetts: Bay State fishing advocates oppose offshore drilling

February 26, 2018 โ€” Frustrated by the Trump administrationโ€™s plans to potentially open areas off the Massachusetts coast to oil drilling, U.S. Sen. Ed Markey convened groups with sometimes divergent interests to collectively oppose the plan on Monday.

The oil industryโ€™s use of controlled explosions to explore the seafloor kills and disrupts the ocean life, from plankton to the endangered right whale, said Scott Kraus, vice president and senior science adviser at the New England Aquarium. If the industry builds oil wells in the offshore fishing areas, that would put the areaโ€™s fishing industry at risk, said Gloucester Mayor Sefatia Romeo Theken at an event held at the aquarium.

Read the full story at the New Bedford Standard-Times

 

The Trump Administration Just Got Sued Over an โ€œUnusual Mortality Eventโ€ in the Ocean

February 23, 2018 โ€” On January 22, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration got word of a juvenile, North Atlantic right whale carcass floating off the coast of Virginia. Later identified as whale #3893, the 39-foot, 10-year-old female was towed to shore, where researchers examined her partially-decomposed remains. A few days later, preliminary necropsy findings indicated that the whale died of โ€œchronic entanglement,โ€ meaning it was caught in rope or line, according to a report from NOAA.

It was the first right whale to die in 2018, but it comes on the heels of the deaths of 17 right whales in the North Atlantic in 2017โ€”a record setting number that is more than all right whale mortalities in the five previous years combined. NOAA researchers are calling the trend an โ€œunusual mortality eventโ€โ€”a particularly concerning phenomenon, as North Atlantic right whales are an endangered species. There are only about 450 left in the wild, according to NOAA, and at the current rate, scientists predict the species could be functionally extinct in fewer than 25 years.

NOAA hasnโ€™t determined the cause of the โ€œunusual mortality event,โ€ but some are looking right at Washington, and at NOAA itself. A new lawsuit, filed January 18 in US District Court in Washington, D.C., argues specifically that the Trump administration is at least partly responsible for failing to adequately address this epidemic.

Between 2010 and 2016, 85 percent of diagnosed whale deaths were the result of entanglement, typically in commercial fishing gear. The plaintiffsโ€”the Center for Biological Diversity, Defenders of Wildlife, and the Humane Societyโ€”allege that President Trumpโ€™s Department of Commerce, of which NOAA is a branch, is in violation of the 1973 Endangered Species Act and the 1972 Marine Mammal Protection Act over their management of the North Atlantic lobster fishery, which โ€œfrequently entangles right whales,โ€ according to the suit. Under the Endangered Species Act, the plaintiffs point out, any action, direct or indirect, by a federal agency must not be โ€œlikely to jeopardizeโ€ any endangered or threatened species.

Read the full story at Mother Jones

 

NMFS Northeast Administrator Michael Pentony taking on whale crisis

February 23, 2018 โ€” In January, Michael Pentony was named to replace John Bullard as the new Regional Administrator for NOAA Fisheries Greater Atlantic Regional Office. Pentony has been with NOAA since 2002 and was most recently the Assistant Regional Administrator for the Sustainable Fisheries Division. Prior to joining NOAA, he was a policy analyst for five years at the New England Fishery Management Council.

Supervising recreational and commercial fisheries, as well as overseeing the welfare of marine species like whales and seals in 100,000 square miles of ocean from the Canadian border to Cape Hatteras and the Great Lakes is no easy task. Pentony inherited a region of tremendous potential but beset by problems both environmental and regulatory.

โ€œThe number one issue right now is the right whale crisis,โ€ Pentony said in a phone interview Thursday. โ€œIt will occupy our resources and energy for the next several years until we can reverse the trend. Thatโ€™s going to be a significant challenge.โ€

NOAA has the unenviable task of managing fisheries so that fishermen get the maximum sustainable yield out of commercial species while being legally bound to protect and restore the endangered North Atlantic right whale. Pentonyโ€™s agency has been named in two recent lawsuits that homed in on its management of the New England lobster industry, one of the primary culprits responsible for whale deaths through entanglement in buoy lines.

โ€œThereโ€™s definitely a sense of urgency. We have to take action and look at all possible avenues,โ€ Pentony said. โ€œWe have a lot of faith in the (Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Team) processโ€ฆRight now everything has to be on the table because itโ€™s such a crisis.โ€

At the same time, lobsters, which are critical to the economy of many small coastal communities, particularly in Maine, are showing some signs that their boom years may be coming to an end. โ€œHopefully, lobster in the Gulf of Maine is not going to be a problem like weโ€™ve seen in Southern New England lobster. Itโ€™s something we are keeping an eye on,โ€ Pentony said.

A large part of the decline of the lobster population to the south of Cape Cod was warming waters due to climate change. Pentony said a warming ocean and its effect on stock abundance, prey, water currents, temperature gradients, increased susceptibility to disease, impacts many species. Many are on the move, seeking cooler water, perhaps in habitats that provide less food or inadequate protection from predators. Others require management changes that could take time.

Black sea bass, for instance, appear to be moving north into the Gulf of Maine where they were rarely seen in numbers. But the bulk of the quota is held by southern states. Unless higher quotas are negotiated for New England fishermen, they could find their fishery on other species restricted by a limit on black sea bass while losing out on selling the bass they do catch.

โ€œThatโ€™s a climate change issue and a management conundrum,โ€ Pentony said. โ€œWe have management challenges on stocks that are in poor shape, but even on a healthy stock we have these challenges.โ€

Pentony would like to see the expansion of aquaculture, both shellfish and finfish.

Read the full story at the Cape Cod Times

 

Scientists: New lobster fishing technology could save whales

February 20, 2018 โ€” FALMOUTH, Mass. โ€” Scientists at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution are urging New England lobstermen to begin using new technology to help prevent the deaths of rare right whales.

The Boston Globe reports scientists from the institution recently met with fishermen to push for the use of traps that can be brought to the surface using radio signals that can inflate bags or send lines to the surface, rather than relying on ropes connected to buoys.

Scientists say that over the past year, at least 18 right whales have died, many after becoming entangled in the ropes. They say there are just 450 of the whales left in the world and just 100 breeding females.

Read the full story from the Associated Press at WTOP

 

Head of Maineโ€™s largest commercial fishing advocacy group to retire after 27 years

February 20, 2018 โ€” David Cousens, the president of Maine Lobstermenโ€™s Association since 1991, has decided to step down from the advocacy group.

โ€œIโ€™ve been doing it for so long, itโ€™s time for the younger generation to step up,โ€ the South Thomaston lobsterman said Thursday. โ€œIโ€™m retiring from the political [stuff].โ€

Cousens says he officially will step down at the MLA annual meeting, which will be held Friday, March 2 as part of the annual Maine Fishermenโ€™s Forum in Rockport.

Cousens, 60, said he wants more time to focus on lobster fishing, spare time to spend with his first grandchild who is expected to be born soon, and less time on the road driving to fishery management gatherings throughout the Northeast.

โ€œI burned out I donโ€™t know how many trucks,โ€ said Cousens, adding he drives between 25,000 and 30,000 miles each year just going to meetings.

He also said someone else should take the lead in addressing what has turned into the dominant factor that likely will shape Maineโ€™s $500 million lobster fishery for years to come: whale conservation.

As Maineโ€™s lobster fishery has changed in recent decades, with many fishermen going further offshore and using more durable rope and multi-trap trawls, it also has faced increased scrutiny from regulators and conservationists who say whales are increasingly at risk of entanglements. In 2009 and again in 2014, lobstermen were required to change how they fish in order to reduce the threat of entanglement to whales, which are protected by federal law.

Read the full story at the Bangor Daily News

 

To protect right whales, scientists propose major changes for lobstermen

February 20, 2018 โ€” WOODS HOLE, Mass. โ€” Without prompt action to reduce entanglements in fishing lines, North Atlantic right whales could disappear from the planet over the next two decades, scientists say.

In response, scientists here on Cape Cod are proposing a novel way to save the species โ€” one that many New England lobstermen fear could destroy their livelihoods.

At a recent meeting with a host of skeptical lobstermen, scientists at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution presented the concept of ropeless fishing, a nascent technology that eliminates the need for the long, taut ropes that extend from millions of traps at the bottom of the ocean to their buoys at the surface. These ropes have killed many of the docile mammals.

โ€œI want to see a profitable, sustainable lobster industry thatโ€™s not abusive to the animals,โ€ said Michael Moore, director of the Marine Mammal Center at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. โ€œBut whatโ€™s happening now isnโ€™t working. Weโ€™re painfully and inexorably squeezing the life out of these animals.โ€

Over the past year, at least 18 right whales have died โ€” a grave blow to a species with only about 450 left in the world and just 100 breeding females. Scientists fear theyโ€™re not reproducing fast enough and could face extinction as soon as 2040.

The problem, Moore and his colleagues say, is that most fatalities appear to be the result of right whales becoming entangled in fishing lines. In a federal survey of right whale deaths between 2010 and 2014, scientists found that 82 percent died as a result of entanglements. The rest died from ship strikes.

Read the full story at the Boston Globe

 

Local group seeks lawsuit to aid right whales

February 9, 2018 โ€” After a year of major losses for North Atlantic right whales, a local environmental advocacy group filed a federal lawsuit against the National Marine Fisheries Service Thursday, arguing that the agency should do more to protect the critically endangered mammals.

Over the past year, 18 right whales have died โ€” a grave blow to a species with only about 450 left in the world. Scientists fear theyโ€™re not reproducing fast enough and could face extinction as soon as 2040.

In response, federal regulators declared an โ€œunusual mortality event,โ€ triggering an investigation into the deaths and bringing more resources to protect the whales.

But lawyers at the Conservation Law Foundation in Boston, which filed the suit, argued that the agency should be doing more.

โ€œRegulators are not just morally mandated to act . . . they are also legally required to ensure fishing efforts do not cause harm to these animals,โ€ said Emily Green, an attorney at the foundation.

Green noted that the vast majority of right whale deaths have been attributed to entanglements in fishing gear, especially the lines that connect surface buoys to lobster traps.

โ€œTragically, chronic entanglement is a source of extreme stress, pain, and suffering for right whales, and can interfere with eating, moving, and reproducing,โ€ Green said. โ€œAnd we know that entanglement can cause long-term adverse health impacts, even for whales that manage to escape the ropes.โ€

Officials at the National Marine Fisheries Service declined to comment.

Read the full story at the Boston Globe

 

Hope, but no calves, spotted as right whales return to Georgia waters

February 5, 2018 โ€” They call her Halo โ€” the right whale was born to another documented calving female, Loligo, in 2005, and was last seen in 2016. That was until staff with the Sea to Shore Alliance spotted her Wednesday near Little St. Simons Island. She, and her companion, are the first right whales seen off the coast of Georgia this calving season, which typically is from November to April.

โ€œThere was an adult female spotted that has had calved before โ€” or has had a calf before โ€” and so weโ€™re hoping that sheโ€™s pregnant and weโ€™ll have a calf in the upcoming days or weeks,โ€ said Clay George, who heads up the state Department of Natural Resourcesโ€™ right whale efforts. โ€œThere was another whale seen with her that was large and appeared to be an adult or a juvenile, but it was not a calf that was born this year. So, we are hoping that perhaps it was also an adult female and may be pregnant also.โ€

There has also been action in the Gulf of Mexico this year.

โ€œMy understanding, from talking to colleagues that work for the state of Florida, that at least two of the sightings (in the gulf) have been confirmed to be a right whale, and the photos suggest that it may have been the same individual whale was seen in both locations, and if so, it appears to be a 1-year-old whale that was born last year,โ€ George said. โ€œSo, those three whales are the only whales that have been seen south of Cape Hatteras, N.C.โ€

There is more than a little amount of worry among whale researchers and experts that the world could be watching the extinction of right whales, considering births are not keeping up with deaths โ€” especially with human-influenced mortality from whales becoming entangled in heavy fishing gear used for lobsters and snow crabs further north.

Read the full story at the Brunswick News

 

  • ยซ Previous Page
  • 1
  • โ€ฆ
  • 75
  • 76
  • 77
  • 78
  • 79
  • โ€ฆ
  • 84
  • Next Page ยป

Recent Headlines

  • MAINE: State of Maine sides with lobstermen, decides to pull minimum lobster size rule
  • Microplastics found in many of Oregonโ€™s most popular fish
  • โ€˜Driving whales crazy.โ€™ Mixed reactions as Trump links wind energy to whale deaths
  • Reminder: Applications for Scientific and Statistical Committee Due January 17
  • ALASKA: Alaska hatchery operators warn against proposed 25 percent cut in egg take
  • US ports will see elevated import volume and costs despite averted strike, experts say
  • ALASKA: USDA purchases $50M in Alaska pollock, aiding fisheries and food banks
  • DELAWARE: Carney, DNREC agree to $128M in wind-power benefits

Most Popular Topics

Alaska Aquaculture ASMFC Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission BOEM California China Climate change Coronavirus COVID-19 Donald Trump groundfish Gulf of Maine Gulf of Mexico Illegal fishing IUU fishing Lobster Maine Massachusetts Mid-Atlantic National Marine Fisheries Service National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NEFMC New Bedford New England New England Fishery Management Council New Jersey New York NMFS NOAA NOAA Fisheries North Atlantic right whales North Carolina North Pacific offshore energy Offshore wind Pacific right whales Salmon Scallops South Atlantic Western Pacific Whales wind energy Wind Farms

Daily Updates & Alerts

Enter your email address to receive daily updates and alerts:
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Tweets by @savingseafood

Copyright ยฉ 2025 Saving Seafood ยท WordPress Web Design by Jessee Productions

Notifications