Conservation groups want U.S. to pressure Canada to protect right whales
HALIFAX — The U.S. government is being urged to pressure Canada to do more to protect the endangered North American right whale population in order to avoid a ban on various Canadian seafood products.
Nine U.S.-based organizations wrote to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration on Tuesday expressing “deep concern” over the ongoing entanglement of right whales in Canadian waters.
The letter highlights the U.S. Marine Mammal Protection Act, which requires a ban on the import of fish, crab and lobster caught with gear that results in the killing or serious injury of marine mammals “in excess of United States standards.” The groups say current conservation measures in Canada are not comparable to those in U.S. fisheries, and improvements are needed to help avoid the species’ extinction.
“We know that there is a major bycatch problem for right whales on both sides of the border, but there’s definitely a problem in Canada,” Sarah Uhlemann, program director of the Center for Biological Diversity in Seattle, Wash., said in an interview Wednesday.