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California Blue Whales Rebound From Whaling 91

vinces99 writes: The number of California blue whales has rebounded to near historical levels, according to new research (abstract) by the University of Washington, and while the number of blue whales struck by ships is likely above allowable U.S. limits, such strikes do not immediately threaten that recovery. This is the only population of blue whales known to have recovered from whaling – blue whales as a species having been hunted nearly to extinction. Blue whales – nearly 100 feet in length and weighing 190 tons as adults – are the largest animals on Earth and the heaviest ever, weighing more than twice as much as the largest known dinosaur, the Argentinosaurus. They are an icon of the conservation movement and many people want to minimize harm to them, according to Trevor Branch, UW assistant professor of aquatic and fishery sciences. California blue whales, most visible while feeding 20 to 30 miles off the California coast, range from the equator to the Gulf of Alaska. Today they number about 2,200, according to monitoring by other research groups, which is likely about 97 percent of the historical levels.
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California Blue Whales Rebound From Whaling

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  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Friday September 05, 2014 @03:08PM (#47837293)

    Wessels.

  • See?! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by CaptainLard ( 1902452 ) on Friday September 05, 2014 @03:16PM (#47837345)
    Its totally possible to make changes in human behavior to minimize or reverse destructive impacts on ecosystems. Obviously every scenario will be different but lets keep it up!
    • Re:See?! (Score:4, Insightful)

      by i kan reed ( 749298 ) on Friday September 05, 2014 @03:26PM (#47837407) Homepage Journal

      No amount of successes of environmentalism will ever be accepted will ever be accepted by the sorts that think this next measure is clearly unnecessary. In fact, once it works, they'll go back to denying the rather important sciences of the previous ones, if DDT is anything to go by.

      I don't know if it's possible to convince anti-environmental nutbars, but I have every reason to believe some douchebag will show up any second after this post to tell me how "silent spring was propoganda".

      • by Anonymous Coward

        How about someone pointing out that your romantic notion of environmentalism changing American business is bogus.

        American business gave up on whaling for economic reasons, because they could make more dollars elsewhere. Whaling declined in the US due to two major factors. The industrial revolution gave investors and workers more options than going to sea chasing whales, and petrochemical based products replaced whale based products.

        Look at those who are most enthusiastic about whaling today. Its primarily p

        • Environmentalism is responsible for the international endangered species protections, which have been the foremost aspect of whale recovery.

          But sure, keep whatever neoliberal fantasies you have. That's not my problem.

          • by Anonymous Coward

            Sorry, but the person with the fantasy is you.

            Endangered species acts have little chance of being enacted, and little chance of being successfully enforced, when the species has a high economic value. Whales once had a high economic value, then they did not. The environment protections occurred after an enormous drop off in whaling due to economic reasons. These environment protections largely affected those who thought whales tasty.

            Want to see the true value of an endangered species act, look at the rhino.

            • by pthisis ( 27352 ) on Friday September 05, 2014 @05:17PM (#47838177) Homepage Journal

              Want to see the true value of an endangered species act, look at the rhino. It regrettably has a high economic value and it is on the path to extinction despite protective acts.

              The white rhinoceros is one of the biggest success stories in environmental conservation. It was down to about 200 individuals by the late 19th century. Following the imposition of hunting restrictions, populations have rebounded to over 20,000 individuals and it was de-listed as an endangered species under CITES in 1995; limited hunting is now allowed to control population growth.

              The black rhinoceros has recovered significantly as well, from a low of about 2400 to almost 5000 current individuals, and it's been reintroduced into at least 3 countries (Botswana, Malawi, and Zambia) where it had been extinct.

              The Indian rhinoceros has also shown rebounding populations in the wake of conservation efforts.

              The Javan and Sumatran rhinos have seen continuing declines in population, as has the northern white rhino (which is either a separate species or a population of normal white rhinos depending on classification); all 3 are now conservation-dependent. But rhinoceri on the whole have shown remarkable comebacks since the advent of environmental protection laws.

              • by Anonymous Coward

                Your research is a bit shallow and misleading, for example:

                The black rhinoceros has recovered significantly as well, from a low of about 2400 to almost 5000 current individuals, and it's been reintroduced into at least 3 countries (Botswana, Malawi, and Zambia) where it had been extinct.

                "Today, black rhinos remain Critically Endangered because of rising demand for rhino horn, which has driven poaching to record levels. A recent increase in poaching in South Africa threatens to erase our conservation success. The increase is driven by a growing demand from some Asian consumers, particularly in Vietnam, for folk remedies containing rhino horn."

                "“Poaching is a scourge that could wipe out decades of conservation gains made for bl

              • by Cyberax ( 705495 )
                Grammar nazi mode on. "Rhinoceros" is a Greek word, not Latin. So for plural you should either stick to English "rhinoceroses" or use the correct Greek plural "rhinoceros".
              • The white rhinoceros is one of the biggest success stories in environmental conservation. It was down to about 200 individuals by the late 19th century. Following the imposition of hunting restrictions, populations have rebounded to over 20,000 individuals and it was de-listed as an endangered species under CITES in 1995; limited hunting is now allowed to control population growth.

                That is not true.

                The white rhino was saved due to the efforts of a few visionaries who convinced the South African government and Swaziland, if I recall correctly, to allow the commercial breeding of white rhino (which means for profit, in case you don't understand economics 101). The fact that people, including Mericuns, could hunt them for large sums of money, meant that there was money to protect them and breed them. That's what saved them, not some misguided utopian green agenda.

                • by pthisis ( 27352 )

                  The white rhino was saved due to the efforts of a few visionaries who convinced the South African government and Swaziland, if I recall correctly, to allow the commercial breeding of white rhino (which means for profit, in case you don't understand economics 101). The fact that people, including Mericuns, could hunt them for large sums of money, meant that there was money to protect them and breed them. That's what saved them

                  The timing simply doesn't support this theory as sole or primary driver--the huntin

            • That's a lot of words to say "I haven't bothered to research this at all and I'm assuming it didn't work because that fits my worldview"

            • Part of a possible protection for species of high economic value is the definition and protection of property rights. If a dozen whales and their offspring can be owned, the owner makes more money maintaining a herd than killing them all off at once.
        • 190 tons of meat and blubber is nothing to sneeze at. If there were no protections, someone would turn them all into economy kitty food or whatever.

          We protect things both for feel-good reasons and for economic reasons, so if whales had large economic value they might still have survived much like cows and chickens are doing well despite being tasty.

          • by arth1 ( 260657 )

            I am very happy that they make a comeback. If they recover to a point that they become harvestable resorce, I may get to eat blue whale again.

            "Whale meat again, don't know where, don't know when...."

          • so if whales had large economic value they might still have survived much like cows and chickens are doing well despite being tasty.

            Or perhaps, more like buffalo have survived. Without economic exploitation they'd probably be gone now. That doesn't mean we should do the same to the whales, but it does suggests that it could be possible.

            It's a lot harder, because the incentive isn't as direct, due to competition. Nobody is running up on your buffalo ranch, killing a multiple-thousand-pound animal, and running off with it. At least, not on any scale.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Its totally possible to make changes in human behavior to minimize or reverse destructive impacts on ecosystems. Obviously every scenario will be different but lets keep it up!

      This is also misleading. Almost all the blue whales are gone, and remain critically endangered.

      http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/scie... [bbc.co.uk]

      While applauding the success of the conservation efforts in the California region, the scientists are well aware that not all whale populations have managed to rebound. In Antarctica, blue whales are at approximately 1% of their historic numbers.

      "California blue whales are recovering because we took actions to stop catches and start monitoring," said Cole Monnahan, "If we hadn't, the population might have been pushed to near extinction - an unfortunate fate suffered by other blue whale populations."

    • Even though it's international law several countries still whale... Using "loop holes".. just saying. Though they wouldn't dare go near the US lol
  • The author of the summary is not up to date on the recent release of info on Dreadnoughtus schrani, now believed to be the largest creature to ever have walked on land.

    See the following:

    http://drexel.edu/now/archive/2014/September/Dreadnoughtus-Dinosaur/ [drexel.edu]

    http://www.cnn.com/2014/09/04/world/americas/dreadnoughtus-huge-dinosaur/index.html [cnn.com]

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dreadnoughtus [wikipedia.org]

    • by chubs ( 2470996 )
      As has already been pointed, out, 190 tons > 65 tons. The author of the summary could well have done his research today, and said "wow. This new article claims that the Dreadnoughtus schrani is roughly 65 tons. If only it had been 2 tons lighter, I could have claimed the blue whale to be 3 times the size of the largest dinosaur, rather than just "more than twice much".
      Yes, it's the largest creature to ever walk on land, but that's only because no whale has ever walked on land.
      • by chubs ( 2470996 )

        Yes, it's the largest creature to ever walk on land, but that's only because no whale has ever walked on land.

        Disclaimer: I have not done any research to substantiate this claim, and I realize it's impossible to prove a negative, but I'm fairly certain there are no documented cases of walking whales.

        • by chubs ( 2470996 )

          Yes, it's the largest creature to ever walk on land, but that's only because no whale has ever walked on land.

          Disclaimer: I have not done any research to substantiate this claim, and I realize it's impossible to prove a negative, but I'm fairly certain there are no documented cases of walking whales.

          Unless, of course, you count the Vancouver Canucks mascott

          • by jamesborr ( 876769 ) on Friday September 05, 2014 @04:12PM (#47837767)
            But what about flying whales? (or should that be falling ones)... Another thing that got forgotten was the fact that against all probability a sperm whale had suddenly been called into existence several miles above the surface of an alien planet. And since this is not a naturally tenable position for a whale, this poor innocent creature had very little time to come to terms with its identity as a whale before it then had to come to terms with not being a whale any more.
        • It's not at all impossible to prove a negative. For example, straightforward observation will prove that as of right now you don't have three hands.

    • No, I'm afraid you'll see that they were. The creature the summary was talking about is a dinosaur of unconfirmed mass, which likely got a bigger than the new one.

      The dreadnoughtus weighs in at 65 tons.
      The Argentinosaurus weighs in at somewhere in the range of 90-110.

      So your correction doesn't work. Sorry.

    • The author of the summary is not up to date on the recent release of info on Dreadnoughtus schrani, now believed to be the largest creature to ever have walked on land.

      Not quite [wikipedia.org]

      Note from the Dreadnoughtus article (emphasis added):
      It is one of the largest of all known terrestrial vertebrates, possessing the greatest mass of any land animal that can be calculated with reasonable certainty

      From the Argentinosaurus article it sounds like the estimates range from 60-90 tonnes, most likely the Argentinosaurus is heavier but we're more confident about the weight of the Dreadnoughtus.

    • The author of the summary is not up to date on the recent release of info on Dreadnoughtus schrani, now believed to be the largest creature to ever have walked on land. See the following:

      http://drexel.edu/now/archive/2014/September/Dreadnoughtus-Dinosaur/ [drexel.edu]

      http://www.cnn.com/2014/09/04/world/americas/dreadnoughtus-huge-dinosaur/index.html [cnn.com]

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dreadnoughtus [wikipedia.org]

      Damn Whales, walking on land everywhere. Oh what's that, they swim? And they way three times as much as the Dreadnoughtus? The author of this comment is not up to date...

  • Japan has just now announced they're resuming whaling for "scientific research" in defiance of a UN ban. They're after minke whales, and a smaller number of fin and humpback whales, not blues... but the timing is odd. Maybe they think Sea Shepherd will be confused, and think they don't have to show up?

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