Canadian seal cull 'unnecessary due to climate change'

mentalfloss

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Jun 28, 2010
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Canadian seal cull 'unnecessary due to climate change'
Study says rapidly thinning sea ice in north Atlantic has ravaged seal numbers, making annual commercial seal hunt superfluous

Canada faced fresh calls to shut down its commercial seal hunt on Thursday, following new evidence that death rates among seal pups had dramatically increased due to thinning winter sea ice.

The study, by scientists from Duke University and the International Fund for Animal Welfare, was the first to track declining sea ice cover in all four harp seal breeding grounds in the North Atlantic – with devastating effect.

David Johnston, research scientist at the Duke University Marine Lab, said: "The kind of mortality we're seeing in eastern Canada is dramatic. Entire year classes may be disappearing from the population in low ice years. Essentially all of the pups die."

Satellite records of ice conditions since 1979 showed that ice cover had fallen by as much as 6% every decade. The research is published in the journal PLoS ONE.

The loss of sea ice – and its threat to the future of seal populations – has been confirmed by Canadian government scientists, the International Fund for Animal Welfare said.

Up to 80% of the seal pups born in 2011 were thought to have died because of lack of ice, according to the department of fisheries and oceans. The study adds additional weight to the long campaign by animal protection groups against the seal hunt.

IFAW said on Thursday that Canada should work towards ending the commercial seal hunt for good, compensating the hunters and retraining them for other jobs. "It is time for the Canadian government to face the reality that the commercial sealing is neither viable nor necessary," the organisation said.

Russia recently banned the import of harp seal pelts. The European Union allows only Inuit seal products.

Female harp seals depend on stable winter sea ice as a safe place to give birth and nurse their young, until the pups are grown enough to hunt on their own. The seals typically seek out the thickest, oldest patches of sea ice each February and March.

The seals are able to adapt to short-term changes in ice conditions, Johnston said. But it was unclear the animals would be able to make a long-term move to new breeding grounds with more stable ice, such as those off east Greenland.

Thousands of seals still return each year to their traditional breeding grounds in the Gulf of St Lawrence or off Newfoundland – despite the declining ice.

"There's only so much ice out there, and declines in the quantity and quality of it across the region, coupled with the earlier arrival of spring ice breakup, is literally leaving these populations on thin ice," Johnston said. "It may take years of good ice and steady population gains to make up for the heavy losses sustained during the recent string of bad ice years in eastern Canada."

Canadian seal cull 'unnecessary due to climate change' | Environment | guardian.co.uk
 

jariax

Electoral Member
Jun 13, 2006
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I'm not a huge fan of the seal hung, but the problem with this study is that IFAW obviously wants to stop seal killing regardless of whether climate change is killing the pups. Therefore, sealers and DFO are going to be skeptical of their findings.

Still, DFO should commission their own study on the seal population before initiating a cull.
Lost, in all of this, is the fact that we don't know exactly how the ecosystem works in regards to the relationship between seals, cod, and other marine predators.
 

Kakato

Time Out
Jun 10, 2009
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I'm not a huge fan of the seal hung, but the problem with this study is that IFAW obviously wants to stop seal killing regardless of whether climate change is killing the pups. Therefore, sealers and DFO are going to be skeptical of their findings.

Still, DFO should commission their own study on the seal population before initiating a cull.
Lost, in all of this, is the fact that we don't know exactly how the ecosystem works in regards to the relationship between seals, cod, and other marine predators.

Climate change isnt killing the seals,the commercial harvest is,shut it down and let the Innuit harvest what they need to survive,mother nature is a bitch,she will balance things out though allways.
 

taxslave

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Nov 25, 2008
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Canadian seal cull 'unnecessary due to climate change'
Study says rapidly thinning sea ice in north Atlantic has ravaged seal numbers, making annual commercial seal hunt superfluous

Canada faced fresh calls to shut down its commercial seal hunt on Thursday, following new evidence that death rates among seal pups had dramatically increased due to thinning winter sea ice.

The study, by scientists from Duke University and the International Fund for Animal Welfare, was the first to track declining sea ice cover in all four harp seal breeding grounds in the North Atlantic – with devastating effect.

David Johnston, research scientist at the Duke University Marine Lab, said: "The kind of mortality we're seeing in eastern Canada is dramatic. Entire year classes may be disappearing from the population in low ice years. Essentially all of the pups die."

Satellite records of ice conditions since 1979 showed that ice cover had fallen by as much as 6% every decade. The research is published in the journal PLoS ONE.

The loss of sea ice – and its threat to the future of seal populations – has been confirmed by Canadian government scientists, the International Fund for Animal Welfare said.

Up to 80% of the seal pups born in 2011 were thought to have died because of lack of ice, according to the department of fisheries and oceans. The study adds additional weight to the long campaign by animal protection groups against the seal hunt.

IFAW said on Thursday that Canada should work towards ending the commercial seal hunt for good, compensating the hunters and retraining them for other jobs. "It is time for the Canadian government to face the reality that the commercial sealing is neither viable nor necessary," the organisation said.

Russia recently banned the import of harp seal pelts. The European Union allows only Inuit seal products.

Female harp seals depend on stable winter sea ice as a safe place to give birth and nurse their young, until the pups are grown enough to hunt on their own. The seals typically seek out the thickest, oldest patches of sea ice each February and March.

The seals are able to adapt to short-term changes in ice conditions, Johnston said. But it was unclear the animals would be able to make a long-term move to new breeding grounds with more stable ice, such as those off east Greenland.

Thousands of seals still return each year to their traditional breeding grounds in the Gulf of St Lawrence or off Newfoundland – despite the declining ice.

"There's only so much ice out there, and declines in the quantity and quality of it across the region, coupled with the earlier arrival of spring ice breakup, is literally leaving these populations on thin ice," Johnston said. "It may take years of good ice and steady population gains to make up for the heavy losses sustained during the recent string of bad ice years in eastern Canada."

Canadian seal cull 'unnecessary due to climate change' | Environment | guardian.co.uk

Hardly unbiased research. About as accurate as anything Suzuki produces.
 

bill barilko

Senate Member
Mar 4, 2009
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The Salish Sea here in southern BC is alive with Pinniped vermin-I would admit to shooting more than a few but would be against my code of never posting about unlawful activities I may have commited.
 
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ironsides

Executive Branch Member
Feb 13, 2009
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Climate change isnt killing the seals,the commercial harvest is,shut it down and let the Innuit harvest what they need to survive,mother nature is a bitch,she will balance things out though allways.

To quote Jurassic Park, nature will always find a way.
 

ironsides

Executive Branch Member
Feb 13, 2009
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Dodo's time had come. Let us not forget that the Monk seals are also facing extinction because of mans pollution of the seas. Point taken.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
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Red Deer AB
If the sea ice was melting the mice population on the land would increase, that means predators will increase and their 'pups' can be 'harvested' to replace the lost seal pups. Remember these are vicious killers at heart.


If something was to be done to protect the pups why not make their chances of not being swept out to sea by a winter storm by doing some work to the islands they are trying to cling to so that they don't get swept out to sea thereby saving some 10,000 pups in just the one year that the loss even made the news.
 

Kakato

Time Out
Jun 10, 2009
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Mice or Lemmings? They run in cycles of 4 years,the rest of the Arctic predators that rely on Lemmings also go in 4 year cycles where the population hits a high point and then starts all over.
 

MHz

Time Out
Mar 16, 2007
41,030
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Dodo's time had come. Let us not forget that the Monk seals are also facing extinction because of mans pollution of the seas. Point taken.

If we really wanted to farm seals it would be as easy as putting in a lot of fish hatcheries all along that whole stretch, perhaps a GM salmon can be created. That isn't even touching on the potential of what could be done on Hudson's Bay but then you have to allow for Polar Bear cubs. The seal hunters fail to realize that the public would buy pictures of live seal pups at a higher yearly return than the skins supply. That would still mean going out and encountering as many different pups as you could as each one is different so most people will find one that they find that is 'extra cute'. With today's ability to do green-screens adding various backdrops and skies would be a snap and something to be collected during the time the pups are not in a white coat.


In a Hudson's Bay that is being intentionally being stocked with fish the bears might be the best protection for fishermen from seals becoming too numerous and nobody would be wearing white seal-skin for fashion or protection from the cold. They would still retain their value as far as selling photo's goes though