17 October 2008

Finally

So, how many fewer whales than 375 does it take to be endangered? The Los Angeles Times has the story:
The Bush Administration today declared a small, isolated population of Beluga whales in Alaska's Cook Inlet as endangered species, rejecting arguments from Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin that these small, white whales were on their way to recovery.
The National Marine Fisheries Service decided to extend federal protections to these whales near Anchorage after their numbers declined nearly 50% in the 1990s and the whales failed to rebound despite a decade-long program to revive the species.
"In spite of protections already in place, Cook Inlet beluga whales are not recovering," said James Balsiger, acting director of the National Marine Fisheries Service. As a practical matter, the new protections mean that new offshore oil drilling, a new bridge, and other industrial activities that involve federal dollars or scrutiny will have to show that they will not harm the estimated 375 beluga whales that remain in local waters.
The decision came after Governor Palin won a six-month postponement of the decision last year, arguing that she and state scientists believe the endangered status was "unwarranted" and that "we've actually seen the beginnings of an increase in their population." Palin was especially concerned, she said, that "an unnecessary federal listing and designation of critical habitat would do serious long-term damage to the vibrant economy of the Cook Inlet area."
That delay gave federal biologists another season to conduct aerial surveys, which confirmed that the population remained at 375 and showed no sign of increase. Estimates have ranged from a high of 653 belugas in 1994 to a low of 278 in 2005.
Whale biologists have not determined why the population has not rebounded since a federal plan curtailed the beluga hunt by Alaskan native tribes in 1999, said Barbara Mahoney, a fisheries service biologist in Anchorage. Subsistence hunters have only taken five Cook Inlet whales since 1999 and none in the last two years. No hunting will be permitted through 2012, a ban which will be extended if the population falls below 350 whales, she said.
Rico says they're flirting with disaster for the poor beluga here, and Palin's an idiot to get on the wrong side of this one...

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