New study finds recovery success
in jeopardy
Date: September 1, 2016
Source: New England Aquarium
The most endangered large whale
species in the Atlantic is threatened by increasing rates of lethal and
debilitating entanglements and a dramatic 40% decline in birth rates since
2010. About 500 North Atlantic right whales still survive after two decades
period of modest annual growth, but the two new emerging trends are casting
doubt on the species overall recovery.
That is the conclusion of a new
study published in Frontiers in Marine Science by Dr. Scott D. Kraus,
Vice President and Senior Adviser, Anderson Cabot Center for Ocean Life at the
New England Aquarium, along with researchers from the University of Rhode
Island, Provincetown Center for Coastal Studies, University of North Carolina,
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, and Duke University.
"Right whales need immediate
and significant management intervention to reduce mortalities and injuries from
fishing gear," the authors concluded in the study. "Managers need a
better understanding about the causes of reduced calving rates before this
species can be considered on the road to recovery. Failure to act on this new
information will lead to further declines in this population's number and
increase its vulnerability to extinction."
Since 1935, when North Atlantic
right whales neared extinction and whaling for this species became illegal,
right whales rebounded to about 295 living whales in 1992. The number of whales
then increased by about 2.8 percent a year, to an estimated 500 right whales in
2010.
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