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Animal

Pas de glace pour les phoques encore cette année...

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Si seulement la chasse pouvait être annulée... Mais c'était pareil l'an dernier et les chasseurs ont quand-même réussi à abattre les survivants qu'ils ont pu repérer à l'aide d'hélicoptères!





With Lack of Ice and Increased Quotas, Seal Pups Cling to Whatever They Can
2011/03/29 By Sheryl Fink Comments (1)

A harp seal awaits an uncertain fate in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. - Photo credit - IFAW/Stewart Cook - 2011


The International Fund for Animal Welfare seal team is on Canada’s East Coast to document the opening of the 2011 commercial seal hunt. Some of the worst ice conditions on record in the Gulf of St Lawrence mean that few pups are expected to survive their first weeks of life. Sadly, Canada’s Fisheries Minister Gail Shea announced an increased allowable catch of 400,000 this year, assuring that any surviving pups can be slaughtered for their fur.

Today’s ice map does not offer much hope that there is any ice left for seal pups. The hunt has opened earlier than usual this year, with most pups still at a whitecoat or ragged jacket stage. Normally the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) does not open the hunt until the vast majority of pups are at the beater stage.

We discovered that once again this year, seal pups were on the beaches of PEI so we went to take a look. A short flight away, we found the seal pups we were looking for on the windswept beaches. They were mostly whitecoat harp seal pups, and a few ragged jackets, basking in the sun and sleeping peacefully even though we were freezing from the cold. Seemingly oblivious to our presence, we snapped a few photos.

Two things seemed clear after our first day at the hunt. First, climate change is having an impact on harp seal habitat and pup survival. It seems unlikely that any of the remaining pups in the Gulf will survive. And second, it is apparent that commercial sealing is a doomed industry. Sealers are staying home not because of the lack of ice and seal pups, but also because there are no buyers for pelts in the area.

Despite the lack of demand for seal products, the federal government continues to promise the commercial seal hunt as some sort of magical cure that will provide future economic opportunities to East Coast communities. But it seems obvious that nothing could be further from the truth. With no ice, no seals, and no markets… there will be no commercial seal hunt.

So why are Canadian politicians leading people to believe otherwise?

– SF

Pétition
Take action for harp seals now at http://www.ifaw.org/seals

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S'il y a moins de victimes c'est déjà ça.

Je crois avoir déjà signée mais j'ai resignée au cas où.

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