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Story Publication logo May 4, 2020

As Right Whales Surge North, One Death Too Many

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Promotional still from 'Entangled' with a whale swimming just under the surface of the ocean. The film's title and award logos are over the photo.
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Entangled

As climate change edges the endangered North Atlantic right whale closer to extinction, saving the...

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Patrick Goguen (right), from Moncton, New Brunswick, beat on a drum while Noel Millea, an elder from Elsipogtog First Nation, performed a ceremony on a dead North Atlantic right whale to honor the animal's spirit before a necropsy is performed on it in Shippagan, New Brunswick. Image by Nathan Klima. Canada, 2019.
Patrick Goguen (right), from Moncton, New Brunswick, beat on a drum while Noel Millea, an elder from Elsipogtog First Nation, performed a ceremony on a dead North Atlantic right whale to honor the animal's spirit before a necropsy is performed on it in Shippagan, New Brunswick. Image by Nathan Klima. Canada, 2019.

MISCOU ISLAND, New Brunswick — Before the leviathan was dragged to shore, before it was found floating at sea trailing a slick of blood, the massive creature had had its run-ins with its greatest nemesis: human beings.

This North Atlantic right whale — among the most endangered species on the planet — was known by researchers as Wolverine, for three propeller cuts on its tailstock that reminded them of the trio of blades used by the comic book character of the same name. In its short life of nine years, journeying through thousands of miles of dense fishing grounds, the whale had endured at least one vessel strike and three entanglements in fishing gear.

Now, Wolverine was decomposing on a grassy beach at the northernmost tip of New Brunswick’s Acadian peninsula, its large, black fins inert in the salty air, its wide fluke tangled in red rope that the Canadian Coast Guard used to haul its carcass in from the frigid waters of the Gulf of St. Lawrence.

The death of even one of the mammals poses a grave threat to the species, given how few remain. But almost as notable is that Wolverine was here at all.

Until recently, right whales were seldom seen this far north. Now about a third of the species regularly comes to feed in these frigid waters. It has proved to be a very dangerous migration.

Lobstermen fished off of Miscou Island at sunrise. Image by Nathan Klima. Canada, 2019.
Lobstermen fished off of Miscou Island at sunrise. Image by Nathan Klima. Canada, 2019.

Shortly after dawn, a visitor from Massachusetts, Jane Sittnick, wandered onto the beach and happened upon the grim sight of the first right whale to be found dead this year. She shook her head as she touched its cold blubber and snapped photos with her cellphone.

“With so few right whales left in the world, this is very upsetting,” she said.

Warmth sends whales north

The discovery this month was the latest blow to a species on the cusp of extinction.

There are just over 400 right whales left, a quarter of them breeding females. The population can’t afford any accidental attrition, scientists say.

While the cause of Wolverine’s death remains unknown, its premature demise has renewed questions about whether Canadians are doing enough to protect the imperiled species as more of them surge to the north.

Two years ago, 12 right whales were found dead in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, an often-icy body of water between Newfoundland and New Brunswick. It was a calamity for the species, one no one had expected.

Image by The Boston Globe.
Image by The Boston Globe.

Before 2017, few right whales had ever been seen anywhere near the area. The whales, which can grow to 60 feet long and weigh more than 250,000 pounds, mainly spent their summers feeding farther south in the Bay of Fundy.

But in recent years, as the surrounding waters of the Gulf of Maine have warmed faster than nearly any other patch of ocean on the planet, the whales’ primary source of food, a fatty, rice-sized copepod known as calanus, collapsed in their traditional feeding grounds.

So they ventured to the Gulf of St. Lawrence, where food was plentiful but where there were few regulations to protect them.

An excavator was used in the necropsy performed on the 9-year-old male right whale that was towed to rest on a beach on Miscou Island. Image by Nathan Klima. Canada, 2019.
An excavator was used in the necropsy performed on the 9-year-old male right whale that was towed to rest on a beach on Miscou Island. Image by Nathan Klima. Canada, 2019.

Most of the deaths in 2017 — which reduced the species’ population by 3 percent — were attributed to ship strikes or entanglements in fishing gear.

“We never previously had any significant mortality events in the Gulf of St. Lawrence,” said Adam Burns, director general of fisheries resource management at Fisheries and Oceans Canada, “so protections weren’t deemed necessary.”

A demand for rules

For many US fisherman, who often feel burdened by catch restrictions and other regulations, the lack of similar rules in Canada was galling. They protested, and politicians echoed their concerns.

In Massachusetts, Representative Seth Moulton and other lawmakers last year wrote to US Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin and Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross, urging them to consider banning all imports of Canadian fish unless the country’s regulators took steps to protect right whales that were at least equivalent with US measures.

“Unless we take drastic action now, the North Atlantic right whale is on a path to extinction within 20 years,” they wrote.

US fishermen and others south of the border called on Canadian regulators to require crab and lobster fishermen to use weak links between their ropes and traps, so the ropes detach from the traps in the event of an entanglement with a whale, as the American fishermen do. They urged Canadians to reduce the strength of their ropes and require lobstermen to use ground lines between traps that sink to the seafloor.

“We are extremely concerned that the US lobstermen are going to continue to pay the price for the lack of conservation in Canada, and do not want to see a repeat of the 2017 season,” said Beth Casoni, executive director of the Massachusetts Lobstermen’s Association.

For the lobstermen, it’s a matter of fairness. For the whales, new protections are a matter of life and death.

Canada’s response

Confronted with the spate of deaths in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the protests, Canada did take action.

Under pressure from the United States and environmental advocates, Canadian officials quickly required ships to reduce their speeds while traveling through the area.

In 2018, they closed off thousands of square miles to fishing, adjusted the timing of their crab and lobster seasons, and implemented a system of temporarily closing areas for at least 15 days where whales were spotted.

Surveillance aircraft flew grid patterns over the gulf, and sensors were deployed in the water to detect whales. Cruise ships were forced to cancel some ports of call, and Transport Canada, the agency that oversees the shipping industry, fined some of the nearly 400 ships that violated the speed restrictions.

Canadian officials noted that there had been no right whale deaths in the gulf in all of 2018. Surveillance aircraft last year identified 131 individual right whales in the area, 25 percent more than were identified in 2017.

“The government of Canada is committed to protecting right whales,” said Michelle Sanders, director of clean-water policy at Transport Canada. “We believe we’re on the right track.”

But, for fisherman, many of the restrictions have been as unpopular in Canada as similar rules have been in New England. Last summer, in a port town near Miscou Island, lobstermen piled their empty traps on local docks to demonstrate their anger.

“It made the job for us very hard — harder than it was,” said Jonathan Hache, who fishes for snow crab in the area.

Fishermen must check their e-mail frequently to make sure the government hasn’t announced another closure to protect the whales.

“The whales have been stressing us,” Hache said.

In response to the mounting pressure, Canadian authorities this year revised their regulations.

They reduced by one-third areas where fishing has been banned throughout the time whales are present. They allowed fishermen to set their traps in shallower waters, of less than 180 feet, which the government had previously prohibited. And they lifted speed restrictions in one significant shipping lane.

In announcing the changes, Jonathan Wilkinson, the minister of Fisheries and Oceans Canada, said the new measures would “strengthen protection for the endangered North Atlantic right whale, while also sustaining and growing the ocean economy.”

Others weren’t so sure.

Summer concerns

In the United States, some worry that the death of Wolverine could be a harbinger for another deadly summer in the region for right whales.

“Canada is definitely not doing enough,” Moulton said. “Their regulations aren’t equal to ours, and they’re getting worse.”

Moulton blamed the Trump administration for not doing more to hold Canada accountable, saying the Cabinet secretaries effectively ignored the recommendations he and fellow lawmakers made last year.

“We have to get the Canadians to do their part,” Moulton said. “The goal should be to save the right whales, not use the extinction of the right whales as a competitive advantage.”

But others said Canada’s approach to protecting right whales, even with the changes made this year, is in some ways preferable to the US regulations.

“The ‘Canada isn’t doing enough’ mantra is outdated and deflects attention from the need for the US to do more,” said Erica Fuller, a senior staff attorney at the Conservation Law Foundation, which has sued the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to force it to take more aggressive action to protect right whales.

She and others have urged NOAA to require similar closures as the Canadians. In New England, the only fishing grounds regularly closed to protect right whales are in Cape Cod Bay, where the state bans lobstermen from deploying gear between February and May.

NOAA is now considering recommendations by a panel it created that could require sweeping changes for fishermen in New England, including reductions by as much as half the lobster lines in vast portions of the Gulf of Maine.

Agency officials also plan to meet their Canadian counterparts later this month in Nova Scotia to discuss what more both governments should do to protect the whales.

“It is too early to tell if collective measures are adequate to prevent further decline of the species,” said Jennie Lyons, a spokeswoman for NOAA.

Moira Brown, a senior scientist at the Canadian Whale Institute and the New England Aquarium, called this year’s regulatory changes in Canada “minor tweaks” that were supported by data.

There are now six planes regularly flying over the gulf, which so far this year have identified more than 70 individual right whales. Those surveillance flights have already triggered more than a dozen temporary closures this year.

“In my opinion, this is the way to manage this fishery,” Brown said, referring to the system of surveillance and closures.

The Canadian government has also allocated about $125 million over the next five years to protect right whales and other endangered marine mammals — far more than the United States, she said.

“Unfortunately, time is going to tell which method works better,” she said.

Looking for reasons

Pierre-Yves Daoust gave directions to other scientists involved in the necropsy of the right whale on Miscou Island. Image by Nathan Klima. Canada, 2019.
Pierre-Yves Daoust gave directions to other scientists involved in the necropsy of the right whale on Miscou Island. Image by Nathan Klima. Canada, 2019.

On the beach on the eastern edge of Miscou Island, where waves lapped onto the deteriorating carcass, one overriding question hung in the pungent breeze: Why did Wolverine die?

To find the answer, a team of about two dozen veterinarians, biologists, and government officials arrived early with plastic body suits, rubber gloves, and newly sharpened, foot-long knives.

Before they began the examination, known as a necropsy, Noel Millea, an elder from the Elsipogtog First Nation, led a ceremony for Wolverine, beating a drum, chanting, and presenting an offering of tobacco to the departed creature.

“It’s important for us to take time to honor the spirit of the animal,” he said, “and be more conscious and aware of the damage that we’re doing to Mother Earth.”

Afterward, the team mounted the spine of the whale and began slicing into its thick blubber. The putrid work required an excavator and a front-end loader, which the team used to peel back layers of blubber to collect samples from the whale’s organs.

A scientist carried away the right whale’s shoulder blade during the necropsy. Image by Nathan Klima. Canada, 2019.
A scientist carried away the right whale’s shoulder blade during the necropsy. Image by Nathan Klima. Canada, 2019.

They worked through the afternoon, until little was left but the whale’s bones.

The remains would be buried on the beach, beside two other right whales interred there in 2017.

Near the end of an exhausting day, Tonya Wimmer, executive director of the Marine Animal Response Society, said it would take months of analyzing the samples before they could reach any conclusions about the cause of death.

Over the past decade, the deaths of nearly three-quarters of all right whales examined have been attributed to entanglements, which was how Wolverine’s mother died. Most of the others perished as a result of ship strikes.

For Wimmer, understanding how such a young whale died offers hope about finding better ways to protect them.

“At this point, no one knows the solution about how to save right whales,” she said. “Every bit of information is vital.”

Image by The Boston Globe Staff.
Image by The Boston Globe Staff.

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