For about 1 penny per American per year, the Marine Mammal Commission has met its Congressional mandate to conserve marine mammals for over 40 years.
We work to ensure that marine mammal populations are restored and maintained as functioning elements of healthy marine ecosystems in the world's oceans.
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Commission Funds New Projects at the Leading Edge of Marine Mammal Conservation
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We are pleased to announce the recipients of our FY18 grants focusing on “Community-driven conservation approaches to eliminate, manage, or mitigate threats to marine mammals.” 77 proposals were submitted for consideration and we have funded five of those for a total of just over $220K. For more information about the projects, visit our
FY18 Grant Awards page. The funded proposals are:
- Community Action to Protect Southern Resident Killer Whales in the San Juan Islands, Washington
- Low-cost solutions to cetacean bycatch in small scale fisheries and potential fisher-level barriers to implementation in Peru and Argentina
- Reducing Whale Strikes through Industry Engagement (California)
- Evaluation of the Effectiveness of Protected Areas in protecting Mediterranean Monk Seal Juveniles at the Cabo Blanco Peninsula (Mauritania/Morocco)
- Developing solutions to the critical threat of bycatch in illegal fisheries for Caspian seals (Pusa caspica) in Dagestan, Russia
Please check
our website in November for details about the topic area(s), proposal requirements, and submission deadline for FY19 Grant Opportunities.
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Mediterranean monk seal, Monachus monachus, in Gokova Bay, Turkey. (Shutterstock)
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Co-Management study visits the Aleutian Islands
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Participants in the Atka (top) and Akutan (bottom) marine mammal hunter and resource user focus groups.
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Following up on a busy start to the summer, the
marine mammal co-management review
team completed its community visits at the end of August. Dr. Jenna Malek and Peggy Osterback, Executive Director of the Aleut Marine Mammal Commission and member of the review Steering Committee, traveled to the Aleutian Island communities of Atka and Akutan to meet with harbor seal and Steller sea lion hunters. While there, they had to the opportunity to talk with hunters and other marine mammal resource users from multiple generations to get a holistic view of the role that these species play as a subsistence resource in the communities. In addition to the trip to the Aleutians, Jenna has been conducting interviews with federal agency staff and other members of the co-management community. The Steering Committee will be meeting in November in Anchorage to discuss the review findings and proposed recommendations for co-management partners. For more details on Jenna and Peggy’s trip, check out Jenna’s personal Alaska adventures blog,
The Curious Walrus
.
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Marine mammals around the world face similar threats and conservation challenges. Therefore, the Commission tracks, supports, and participates in many international marine mammal conservation efforts. Here are some examples of our recent international engagement:
- MMC Commissioner, Dr. Michael Tillman, chairs the International Whaling Commission (IWC) Aboriginal Subsistence Whaling Working Group and served on the U.S. Delegation at the IWC67 meeting in Brazil. For a full summary on the recent meeting, check out the International Institute for Sustainable Development IWC report or view a brief synthesis here.
- The Commission has been working to support efforts by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) and the new Alaska Nannut Co-management Council to establish a cooperative program to implement U.S. obligations under the bilateral US-Russia polar bear agreement. View the report from the summer bilateral meeting here.
- The Commission has supported the participation of Dr. Jeremy Kiszka of Florida International University to highlight the issue of cetacean bycatch in meetings of the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC).
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Ropeless Gear Meeting in California
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There have been increased reports of large whale entanglements in Dungeness crab fishing gear on the West Coast. The use of
ropeless gear
is being explored in a number of trap/pot fisheries around North America as a possible technology to reduce the number of entangling vertical lines in the ocean. This summer, the Commission and Oceana co-organized a meeting at the Marine Mammal Center in Sausalito, CA, to discuss fishermen’s perspectives on ropeless fishing gear and to hear from gear developers. A main goal of the meeting was to discuss plans for further testing in the Dungeness crab fishery. Because the danger of vertical lines afflicts large whales on both coasts and, more recently in the Bering Sea, the Commission is working to ensure communication between all parties focusing on ropeless gear. Therefore, scientists from the East Coast were encouraged to call in to the California meeting. The meeting summary is available on
our website and for more information about what California is doing to address entanglements, go
California Dungeness Crab Fishing Gear Working Group page.
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True-ly Amazing! First Study Uncovering the Lives of True's Beaked Whales
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A beaked whale surfaces not far from the Gordon Gunter (NOAA Permit #21371).
Credit: Salvatore Cerchio
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Commission staff joined experts from nine collaborating organizations on a
research cruise
focused on True’s beaked whales in the western North Atlantic. The True’s beaked whale, which is up to 5 meters in length, was first described by Smithsonian scientist Frederick W. True in 1913 based on a specimen that stranded in Beaufort, NC; that skeleton is in the institution’s research collection. Over the century since, this species has only known from a few handfuls of strandings and even fewer opportunistic sightings. It had never been studied alive... until now, when dozens were sighted during the expedition. The cruise collected both sightings and acoustic data on True’s beaked whales, along with photographs, biopsies and water samples for environmental DNA (eDNA). A digital acoustic recording tag affixed to an animal by suction cup was deployed for over 12 hours, providing a glimpse into the species’ dive behavior. The success of this cruise in elucidating details of the lives and identifying characteristics of these difficult to identify and little-known beaked whales gives us insight into their distribution, social structure, behavior, and resource requirements, which can better inform management and conservation decisions. The deep-water areas off Georges Bank and near the Northeast Canyons and Seamounts Marine National Monument appear to be important habitat for True’s beaked whales, as well as other little known species such as Cuvier’s and Sowerby’s beaked whales, dwarf and pygmy sperm whales, and numerous better known dolphin and large whale species. This project was led by Chief Scientist, Danielle Cholewiak, of the Northeast Fisheries Science Center (NMFS/NOAA) as a part of the annual survey efforts of
Atlantic Marine Assessment Program for Protected Species (AMAPPS)
, a collaborative long-term research and monitoring program involving the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, the U.S. Navy, NOAA Fisheries, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
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Hot Topics in Marine Mammal Conservation:
Threats Facing Southern Resident Killer Whales
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The Southern Resident killer whale (SRKW) population (J, K, and L pods), found seasonally in the Salish Sea and listed as endangered under the
ESA, is declining at an alarming rate. Following the recent deaths of the subadult female
J50 and of J35’s newborn calf, only 74 individuals remain, bringing the three pods to levels last seen in the 1970’s after reaching a peak of 96-98 whales in the 1990s. Three factors of 1) insufficient availability of Chinook salmon prey, 2) vessel disturbance, and 3) contaminants, have contributed to diminished condition and health and the recent reproductive failure in the population. Actions to protect and conserve the killer whales are being discussed at many levels of government with a wide variety of stakeholders, as all involved recognize the urgency of the situation at hand.
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Photo taken by UAV from above 90 feet under NMFS research permit and FAA flight authorization(Credit: NOAA Fisheries and Vancouver Aquarium).
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Welcoming a new member to the MMC staff!
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We are excited to announce the hiring of
Merra Howe as the Commission’s new Policy Analyst. In this role, she will be responsible for reviewing comments on permit applications and biological opinions, as well as helping to assess and develop policy advice for the International and Policy Program at the Commission. Prior to joining the Commission, Merra worked at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on congressional and legislative affairs after spending a year there as a 2017 Knauss Marine Policy Fellow. She received an M.S. in marine biology at the University of Hawaii at Manoa where she studied the distribution of odontocetes around the Maui Nui islands of Hawaii through citizen science observations and passive acoustic monitoring. Her experience with passive acoustic monitoring stemmed from her prior work with Cook Inlet belugas as a technician for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game and a research associate at the Oceanwide Science Institute. Please join us in welcoming Merra!
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Fun Fact: Her favorite marine mammal is the beluga whale and her first job required her to live on a seven-acre rock
without running water or electricity
off the Maine coast monitoring puffins and other seabirds.
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Marine Mammal Commission scientific advisors, staff, and science in the news
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Commission-affiliated scientists have been featured in a variety of media publications, while sharing their expertise on a variety of topics.Below are a few recent media highlights that reflect some of the ongoing scientific accomplishments of these world-renowned marine mammal scientists.
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For a reminder of our Commissioners, Committee of Scientific Advisors, and Staff, visit
our website.
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Photo of a California Sea Lion by
Josh Valcarcel
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True's beaked whales on the surface. Photo credit: NOAA Fisheries/Robert Pitman (Permit #21371)
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