Strategy for the Northern and Southern Resident Killer Whales

155 pilot whales commit suicide by swimming onto beach in new zealand.
How long will it take before our West Coast Fake News Professionals donate their opinion that the Whales
were trying to escape the sport fishermens engine and depth sounder noise?
Will New Zealand buy into the same way as our BS Government has.
 
I've done a post on the issue of Killer Whales, Chinook, Sport Fishing and ENGOs that responds to this TC article. You may want to read it: https://fishfarmnews.blogspot.com/2018/11/southern-resident-killer-whales-sport.html.






Island Voices: Resident orcas are on the precipice
This past summer, the world’s attention was focused on the critically endangered southern resident killer whales that inhabit the Salish Sea and its outside coastal waters.

Tahlequah (J35) carried her dead calf for more than two weeks in a visible display of grief. At the same time, another young, infirm female, Scarlet (J50), was the focus of unprecedented Canadian and U.S. efforts to administer medication and food. The death of these whales was on the heels of another loss, Cruiser (L92), a whale who should have had decades of life ahead of him.

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Just before these events, the federal government determined that southern residents face “imminent risk of extinction” under present conditions. Mothers cannot sustain pregnancies, and individuals in their reproductive prime are dying. There is a large and growing body of evidence that the current levels of chinook-salmon abundance, ocean noise and disturbance, and polluted waters, create conditions that make population recovery for the southern residents untenable.

That said, there is hope if concrete action is taken now to address these threats. An analysis of population viability conducted by an international team of scientists examining whether recovery is possible shows that a 50 per cent reduction in existing noise levels, combined with substantive efforts to increase chinook abundance, could halt the decline and move this population toward recovery.

After years of legal, scientific and public outreach efforts requesting concrete action from federal agencies, Raincoast Conservation Foundation, David Suzuki Foundation, Georgia Strait Alliance, Natural Resources Defense Council and World Wildlife Fund-Canada, represented by Ecojustice, filed a lawsuit in September 2018 to compel the government to issue an emergency order to reduce threats to the southern residents. An emergency order is a legal tool that allows the government to cut through regulatory red tape and introduce wide-ranging protections for species at risk.

The federal government recently announced its refusal to issue an emergency order, despite the minister of environment and climate change and the minister of fisheries and oceans’ recommendation to do so.

Although we commend the ministers for recommending an emergency order be used, we are deeply disappointed that cabinet rejected what we believe to be the best available tool to recover these whales. Instead, the government has promised to take wide-ranging, yet vaguely defined, actions by April that we presume are intended to halt the decline and begin the recovery of these iconic whales.

To achieve these goals, however, we continue to call for enforceable and specific protection measures that improve chinook abundance, reduce vessel noise and disturbance, and regulate pollutants. Aggressive measures that will support whales being able to successfully feed in the Salish Sea by next spring include the following:

1. Create feeding refuges where commercial and recreational salmon fishing and whale-watching on southern resident killer whales are prohibited.

2. Close marine commercial and recreational chinook fisheries that catch mixed populations of chinook from southern B.C. and other populations important to the diets of southern residents.

3) Restrict commercial and private whale-watching on southern resident killer whales in critical habitat.

4) Set mandatory targets to reduce noise and disturbance from commercial vessels travelling in critical habitat and take steps to quantifiably reduce the cumulative levels of noise and disturbance from all marine traffic.

If southern resident killer whales are to live on in the Salish Sea, decisive steps producing substantive reductions in known threats need to be taken now. Proposed cure-alls such as more hatchery salmon and killing seals have little scientific basis, even though some might see these as solutions.

Harbour seals are believed to be competitors with humans for commercially valuable fish, but there is little evidence that decreasing the seal population increases the available fish catch. Ocean Wise marine mammal experts Drs. Peter Ross and Lance Barrett-Leonard have responded to the notion of a seal population “explosion” by pointing out “there has been virtually no change in seal numbers in B.C. in more than 20 years.” They also state “a seal cull could actually destabilize the coastal food web” and that declining chinook salmon abundance “is the result of a complex variety of factors and cannot be solely attributed to harbour seals.”

Through a suite of interactions, hatcheries are part of the reason that wild-salmon populations have failed to recover. Increased hatchery production would drive down the fitness of wild populations, further delaying or even preventing chinook recovery. Such proposals are symptomatic of the failure to address past mismanagement of chinook populations coast-wide and the hope that an industrial-technological solution will somehow solve a complex ecological problem.

Conversely, analysis by scientists has shown that letting migrating chinook salmon pass the hooks and nets of fisheries can improve survival rates of these whales.

The probability of killer-whale persistence declines with ongoing environmental degradation, loss of habitat, reduction of prey and decreasing population size. We believe it is essential for the federal government to take the bold measures necessary to restore southern resident critical habitat, halt the declining population, give the calves of the currently pregnant females in J and K pods their best chance at survival, and serve as the first steps toward killer-whale recovery.

Misty MacDuffee is a biologist and director of Raincoast Conservation Foundation’s wild-salmon program. Chris Genovali is executive director for Raincoast.

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DFO's #1 mandate is to ensure there is no big controversy before next year's federal election and that the corporate donations flow into the campaign funds.
See my post below on the issue of Killer Whales, Chinook, Sport Fishers, ENGOs, Nov 26, 2018
 
You mention triploids, would they return or would they just stay out in the feeding grounds until they die?
They come back. You may know that untriploided chinook, particularly chinook, that come back, can't successfully spawn in some systems. I don't know about all.
 
They come back. You may know that untriploided chinook, particularly chinook, that come back, can't successfully spawn in some systems. I don't know about all.
Could you elaborate a bit on this? I don't understand what you are saying.
 
Could you elaborate a bit on this? I don't understand what you are saying.
If the fish are sterile, they can't spawn, and they can't contaminate the gene pool for the river. So that is why triploided fish would be used. Diploiding and triploiding has been commonly used to sterilize fish for decades, particularly in trout.

I don't know why non-sterilized chinook should not be able to spawn, but this is what the hatchery on the Nitinat has told me for many years. Presumably it is the result of epigenetics, which changes gene expression based on the environment the fish has been in.
 
Let me add that if you read the two links at the end of the article on epigenetics they will explain what happens.
Yeah thanks, I understand triploids and the benefit they can have - see interior trout fisheries. You lost me with "untriploided", lol!
 
Let me add that if you read the two links at the end of the article on epigenetics they will explain what happens.
Mt Reid, I am curious if you have done any assessment of water quality and how it could be effecting coastal ecology? In my travels across the province and coastal waters I have noticed that every stream that has depressed salmon and steelhead populations also lacks supporting ecology being invertebrates to support juvenile salmon.
Have you conducted any efforts to investigate the water chemistry trends or supporting ecology in salmon streams?
 
https://vancouverisland.ctvnews.ca/mobile/video?clipId=1549952
In this video Nick Templeton, spokes person for Campbell River Whale Watching says there is no proof Seals and Sea Lions are eating salmon.
Wonder what world he lives in???
Maybe a world that spends as much time watching Seals and Sea Lions then Whales and do it for a living!!
Maybe not the group we want to hitch our wagons to. As long as they can show their clients something to film they are good. Feels kinda like a pilot fish with these guys.
 
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https://vancouverisland.ctvnews.ca/mobile/video?clipId=1549952
In this video Nick Templeton, spokes person for Campbell River Whale Watching says there is no proof Seals and Sea Lions are eating salmon.
Wonder what world he lives in???
Maybe a world that spends as much time watching Seals and Sea Lions then Whales and do it for a living!!
He's not wrong actually. Nick Templeton has research and data to support his view .
We just had another marine mammal symposium at UBC. Here are three presenters that shed light on salmon predation by seals.
#1 Seal scat survey shows seals eat primarily forage fish go to minute 1:53:42
#2 Herons eat more salmon smolts than seals. Do we cull Herons? go to minute 2:01:22
#3 Why Seal Cull won,t work. Lance Barret-Lennard go to minute 6:42
 
If we were smarter we would HIRE our own specialist authority that knows everything. Start publishing,
and lecturing and get our views in the PRESS.
eg.
Upon further in depth study by our group of volunteers and experienced professional scientists ,
we have confirmed proof a sportfishing vessel with a outboard motor and a hummingbird depth sound had NO ...ZERO effect upon
SSKW that were in area. they even dove under the boat while our scientist were testing with frequency,s and running down riggers.
However , everytime we caught a salmon , it was stripped from the line by aggressive behaviour Seals and Sea Lions.
We also believe that if these hungry KW are too lazy to swim out to Swiftsure for a meal then the government should consider a feeding station off Discovery Island and feed them regularly with Farmed Chinook salmon.
They are very smart animals and would catch on to this free meal machine as quickly as the east side junkies do for free methadon and other handouts.
 
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