[NatureNS] Right whale killed by collision with ship (Sept. 5, 2006)

Date: Wed, 06 Sep 2006 11:13:41 -0300
From: Jim Wolford <jimwolford@eastlink.ca>
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From: "James D. Harris" <hajji@ns.sympatico.ca>
Date: Tue, 05 Sep 2006 16:59:13 -0300
Subject: Right whale killed by collision with ship (Sept. 5, 2006)

Right whale killed by collision with ship

CBC News: September 5, 2006

A four-year-old North Atlantic right whale found dead in the Bay of Fundy
had been hit by a ship, federal fisheries experts say. A coast guard patrol
found the 45-tonne, 14-metre whale floating off Yarmouth, in southwest Nova
Scotia, on Sunday. This is the second female right whale to be struck by a
vessel in the Bay of Fundy this summer. A 25-tonne, nine-metre whale was
found floating between the islands of Campobello and Grand Manan on July 24.

"It's certainly a big problem," said Jerry Conway, a marine mammal expert
with the Department of Fisheries and Oceans. "We've lost a potential calf
production, if you will, of about 20 animals." The slow-moving North
Atlantic right whale is an endangered species in Canada. There are only
about 350 left, according to some estimates.

In recent years, marine scientists have managed to reroute shipping lanes in
the Bay of Fundy to divert large tankers away from whale habitats. But
Conway said there's not much else that can be done to protect the whales,
which are difficult to spot in fog or rough seas. "They do spend a lot of
time on the surface and have a very low profile on the surface, so mariners
are aware [and] they do try to avoid them, but unfortunately these accidents
do happen," he said.

Conway said the blubber from the whale found near Yarmouth will be buried,
while the bones are going to the Museum of Natural History in Halifax.
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