Global warming disaster as thousands of harp seal pups perish
09/01/2007 00:00:00Experts with International Fund for Animal Welfare have been carrying out daily surveillance flights over the region. They report that the Gulf of St. Lawrence, which is the annual birthing ground of hundreds of thousands of harp seals, is essentially devoid of both ice and seals.
‘The conditions this year are disastrous. I’ve surveyed this region for six years and I haven’t seen anything like this,’ said Sheryl Fink, a senior researcher with IFAW. ‘There is wide open water and almost no seals. I only saw a handful of adult harp seals and even fewer pups, where normally we should be seeing thousands and thousands of seals.’
‘It’s highly likely that this year we could have close to 100% pup mortality in the Gulf of St. Lawrence due to the poor ice conditions caused by rising temperatures,’ said Dr. David Lavigne, IFAW’s science advisor, who recently co-authored a report on the impacts of global warming on harp seals.
‘It would be reckless for the government to allow the hunt to proceed this year, given the high pup mortality that has apparently occurred,’ said Fink. ‘We may not be able to save these seals from the effects of global warming, but the Canadian government can save the survivors from being hunted. I can only hope that they will do the right thing and cancel the hunt.’ The Canadian government has permitted nearly one million seals to be killed in the past three years. The government quotas have continually exceeded the number of seals that can be safely removed without causing the population to decline.
Last year, the TAC was set at 335,000 seals (far above the estimated sustainable level of 250,000) and the total number of seals reported killed was over 354,000 – exceeding the legal limit by 19,000 animals. Of the 354,000 seals killed last year, 98% were under three months of age.
To learn more about IFAW’s efforts to end the Canadian commercial seal hunt, visit www.stopthesealhunt.co.uk today.
Click here to read more about IFAW’s work. Canada's seal hunt
IFAW opposes Canada’s commercial seal hunt on the grounds that it is cruel, unnecessary and unsustainable.
In the UK, IFAW is calling on the Government to impose a national ban on the import of harp and hooded seal fur and other seal products from the Canadian commercial hunt, to send a message to Canada that the UK wants no further part in this cruelty.
The UK Government recently announced it would support the introduction of an EU-wide ban. However, it could take several years for this to come into effect and the EU Commissioner responsible has recommended that member states implement national bans in the meantime.
Belgium has already introduced a national ban, a temporary ban is in place in Italy and Germany and the Netherlands are both in the process of introducing bans.
