The U.S. and Mexican governments have agreed to permanently ban gillnetting throughout the range of the world's smallest and rarest porpoise. Nighttime fishing is also banned. Still, there are maybe 80 individuals - but that's probably high. One leading cetologist, Dr. Robin Baird told me he thought it closer to 50.
NOAA photo
The story of the vaquita is worth revisiting. When I wrote
Rumors of Existence in 1996, I called it “the world's newest and rarest
porpoise.” Its tale begins with a single skull found on the beach in the Gulf
of California. That discovery was made
in 1950, but another eight years passed before Kenneth Norris and William McFarland
had enough information to present the vaquita, or Gulf of California porpoise,
to the scientific world.
At five feet long or less, and never weighing much over a
hundred pounds, the vaquita was indeed tiny by cetacean standards. Its size may have helped it keep hidden:
so, undoubtedly, did its shyness. The
animal generally avoids boats, an unusual trait for a porpoise (but a wise one). Local fishermen did know it existed, and it
was they who called it vaquita, or "little cow."
This
porpoise is mainly light gray, although the color usually darkens from the
dorsal fin to the tail. The belly is
white, and there are dark ovals around the eyes. In addition to accidental catches in
gillnets, the porpoise has declined as the Gulf's ecology has suffered due to
overfishing and agricultural runoff, and the food supply is dwindling. The vaquita is unusually vulnerable to such
threats because it does not migrate: in fact, it has the most restricted range
of any marine mammal in the world.
When I wrote that book, the population was estimated at 200 to 400. Think about how sharply it's declined despite the actions of conservationists, scientists, and governments. It's pretty scary. And the newest measures may or may not be in time.
Some early sources I used:
Brown,
Martha. 1987. "Searching for the
Vaquita," Defenders, May-June
Mulvaney,
Kevin,et. al.. 1990. The Greenpeace Book of Dolphins. New
York: Sterling Publishing Company.
No comments:
Post a Comment