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In the northwest Atlantic, five million harp seals
are positioning themselves to feed, whelp, breed, and moult, as they have
for centuries. In 1998, however, after some thirteen years without
appropriate annual harvest, they are not doing as well physically as they
were during the early 80's, when a much smaller herd of 1.8 million existed
in harmony with an annual take of some 180,000 animals.
This year, various human
factors, including pelt subsidies from government, a resurgence of market
interest in hair seal pelts, seal leather, and new interest in seal oil for
human consumption coupled with tremendous overpopulation, has resulted in a
quota of over 200,000 animals. The renewed harvest is taking place
amid great excitement and hope for renewal.
The harvest today is being
undertaken because of both government and sealer concern. The seal herd has
to be skillfully managed again, and quickly, before it is too late to save
the seals, their environment, and the people whose lives have for so long,
been so closely intertwined with them. This spring's herd monitoring and
seal pup counts in both the Gulf of St. Lawrence and off the Front, will
tell the story, and subsequent quotas will be adjusted to achieve the best
possible balance between seals, sea, and human use. When the European
market banned the import of whitecoat pups, the seals were not saved.
Quite the contrary. They have since multiplied to the extent that
they need to be harvested for appropriate management. Overcrowding is
itself, a cruel consequence of ignorant, albeit well-meaning, interference.
The instigation of anti-hunt campaigns appears to have at once been
financially rewarding to the organizations yet destructive to seals.
The bottom line is this; the
best future for harp seals in the north Atlantic involves humans using seal
products in a sustainable manner over the long term.
Twice this sustained and
balanced use has been halted, and twice, the herd has grown so large that
the animals have suffered, due to their own social and dietary
stresses.
Sealers know their animals,
and they want to be sure that the harvest is appropriate to the population
dynamics churning the herd. The mixed history of seal use and neglect can
now be taken into account as quotas are based on documented herd reaction
to its own numbers. The talk now is of better management through controlled
and renewed use; of seal oil capsules and the promise of human health
benefits, and the excitement of new garment and leather fashions.
Canadians are to be congratulated on their new plans for "Sealing the
Future" through renewed seal management. |