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Whale-proof Fishing Gear
Current efforts to disentangle whales that become trapped in fishing
gear, although essential, are "really only a Band-Aid," says
a Duke marine-mammal expert who has participated in past whale
rescues.
"It's something to do in the interim while we search for better
solutions," says Andrew Read, the Rachel Carson Associate Professor
of marine conservation biology at Duke's Nicholas School of the Environment
and Earth Sciences. "What we're doing is kind of like emergency-room
care for whales that become entangled. The real answer is developing
fishing gear that doesn't entangle whales in the first place."
Read says large marine mammals usually become entangled in fixed
lines extending from nets or lobster pots on the ocean bottom or
floats or buoys on the surface. Ideas currently being tested to address
the problem include weak links in the anchoring line that give way
if a whale becomes ensnarled, or lines that decompose when exposed
to the sun.
Read, who is based at Duke's Marine Lab in Beaufort, North Carolina,
took part in a successful expedition several years ago to disentangle
a humpback whale off Cape Lookout. "Humpback whales are easier
to disentangle than right whales," he says. "Right whales
are stronger and less amenable to work with. They can be very aggressive.
They'll thrash their tails. People have had much less success disentangling
them."
"And the stakes are much higher," he adds. There are about
350 right whales in the entire North Atlantic Ocean, and only a very
few right whales in the Pacific. "So every loss is a significant
one to the population. We think the population has been declining
slowly for the last decade. A really good bumper crop of calves a
couple of years ago helped. But the population is highly endangered
and has a significant risk of extinction if we don't solve these
problems."
Besides entanglement in fishing lines, right whales are subject to
collisions with big vessels such as tankers, he says.
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