Dangerously low sardine populations, starving sea lions, brown pelicans now have a chance
Thousands of starving sea lions have washed up on California shores due to sardine overfishing. NOAA Fisheries / West Coast
These actions were prompted by a recent scientific review of sardine numbers, which revealed that sardine biomass had fallen under 97,000 metric tons—more than 50,000 metric tons below the Council’s “cutoff” level for allowing directed fishing on sardines. Sardine numbers have declined precipitously in recent years, falling by more than 90% since 2007. Surveys indicate that there has been very little spawning in recent years. Today’s action is critical for protecting spawning sardine and allowing the population to rebuild.
Marine predators that depend on sardine have also experienced serious harm in recent years, with brown pelicans experiencing mass breeding failures and sea lion pups experiencing 70% mortality rates due to lack of enough nutritious prey. News outlets have widely covered the sea lion disaster, wherein thousands of sea lions have washed up, starving or already dead, on California shores.
Anchovy, another forage species that these animals depend on, are also at very low numbers, making today’s action to conserve sardine in the forage base even more important.
Earthjustice attorneys have been advocating for years for improvements to sardine and anchovy management in order to better account for predator needs, and most recently Earthjustice attorney Andrea Treece has been working with partners at Oceana to advocate for this outcome, in an effort to prevent the sardine population from crashing further and resulting in another wave of emaciated sea lions washing up along our coastline. Treece testified at the Pacific Fishery Management Council meeting to this effect on Monday, April 13 and Wednesday, April 15.
The following is a statement from Earthjustice attorney Andrea Treece:
“We applaud the Council stepping up to protect sardines and the ecosystem by requesting the urgent closure of the sardine fishery. This was not an easy decision, but absolutely necessary to give sardines a chance to rebound as well as to protect the numerous predators like sea lions, pelicans and salmon that depend on sardine. We call on the National Marine Fisheries Service to swiftly implement the closure that the Council has requested.”
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Source: www.earthjustice.org