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Demand Action on Seal Overpopulation

January 9, 2020

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The Fish, Food and Allied Workers Union (FFAW-Unifor) is calling on the federal government to take immediate action to control seal overpopulation in an effort to protect extremely vulnerable cod stocks on the south coast of Newfoundland and in the Gulf of St. Lawrence.

The most recent assessment of southern Gulf cod (4T) was clear; extinction of that cod population is highly probable due to predation by grey seals. Scientists in the region took over a decade to acknowledge the impact seals were having in the southern Gulf region, and by that time the stock was already experiencing threatened extinction. A domino effect is now working its way up the coast with seal predation threatening cod stocks on the south coast of Newfoundland (3Ps) and in the northern Gulf of St. Lawrence up to the Northern Peninsula (3Pn4R).

“For over two decades, I sat at the assessment and management tables with DFO where we repeatedly called on the government to take action against seal overpopulation. In that twenty years, absolutely no concrete action has been taken. We’ve now arrived at a point where three cod stocks in Atlantic Canada may go extinct as a direct result of natural mortality – specifically as a result of seal predation,” says David Decker, FFAW-Unifor Secretary Treasurer.

“When you look through the cod assessments for the southern Gulf stock over the past two decades compared to the south coast cod stock assessments, the parallels are striking with high natural mortality, particularly among older cod (ages 5+). It took multiple assessments and considerable research to definitively show the impacts of seal predation. If we are going to do similar work here, we will need to start now and learn from adjacent stocks,” explains Dr. Erin Carruthers, FFAW-Unifor Fisheries Scientist.

 This month’s assessment update from DFO confirmed the worst – natural mortality is having grave effects on the south coast cod stock. Action must be taken before the impacts cannot be reversed.

Earlier this year, FFAW-Unifor began circulating a petition requesting the government take action to control seal overpopulation. Thousands of signatures have been recorded and FFAW-Unifor intends to submit the petition to the House of Commons in the coming weeks. Coastal communities depend on healthy ecosystems for survival, and as groundfish recover it is of utmost importance that the government take the necessary steps to support a balanced ecosystem and a sustainable seal harvest.

“Creating a Task Team is simply not enough. We cannot sit idly as these cod stocks are devastated directly as a result of seal overpopulation. The time is long overdue for our government to protect important fish species and prevent catastrophe. This lack of action is already being felt by fish harvesters and coastal communities. It’s crucial that we learn from what happened in the southern gulf and take action before the impacts cannot be reversed,” concludes Decker.

Sign the online petition now!

 

Dr. Erin Carruthers

Dr. Erin Carruthers is the Science Director and Senior Fisheries Scientist with the Fish, Food and Allied Workers Union (FFAW-Unifor), which is the labour union that represents the owner-operator fleet in Newfoundland and Labrador. The FFAW is committed to research and management that supports healthy oceans, fisheries, and coastal communities. Dr. Carruthers received her Ph. D. in Biology from Memorial University in 2011 followed by a postdoctoral fellowship with the Centre for Fisheries Ecosystems Research. Before coming to Newfoundland, Erin worked as a Research Biologist with Fisheries and Oceans Canada at the St. Andrews Biological Station. Her current research program is co-constructed with fish harvesters and includes research on coastal fishing communities, collaborative longline and trap surveys, and best practices for the avoidance, handling and release of unwanted catch.