A Seal Problem In South Australia-Some Want Them Gone

I guess its down to the same thing as in other places where there is an overpopulation - free hunting season - wasn't a famous political leader of Alaska known to shoot over populated wolves from a helicopter. That person is of course very much despised, even here in Canada for her callous disregard for life.
 
I guess its down to the same thing as in other places where there is an overpopulation - free hunting season - wasn't a famous political leader of Alaska known to shoot over populated wolves from a helicopter. That person is of course very much despised, even here in Canada for her callous disregard for life.

What are the common uses for dead Seal-the meat, the blubber, the organs? Never heard of a seal delicacy. I guess the shark tour boats would have plenty of chum.
 

I can't even imagine - but there is still seal hunting in eastern Canada, greatly deplored -- I believe the seal fur is exported to far outer regions of northern china or russia, don't know for sure. I can't imagine anyone wanting it. I doubt if the meat is used at all, but I don't know - engine oil?
 
Australia is also having a problem with too many cats , apparently; so they are now going to start shooting the feral cats as well.
The cats have been killing many of the local wildlife for food, and some of these creatures are now going extinct, or are very close to that.
I think that it is a shame when we have to do any kind of population control; but when there are too many predators, then something has to be done.
When I lived in Idaho, I lost my little dog to a coyote that came right into the yard and killed her and dragged her off. I searched for days, and all I ever found was her little collar way out in the deep grass. You can bet that I would have shot any coyotes that I saw up by my trailer house !

Now, they have re-introduced wolves into Idaho as well, and my friend tho lives there said that they often see calves and deer being attacked in pastures very close to town.
She told me that the moose now come into town year around just to get away from the wolves.
Ranchers are losing their calves and sheep to wolves; so they are not just living out in the mountains and eating prey that they catch out there. They are coming closer and closer into town, and even people out in the woods have reported being followed by the wolves.

So, even though it is a shame to have to kill animals; when they become over-abundant, and then pose a threat to other species, something must be done.

http://www.rt.com/news/310149-australia-war-cats-environment/
 
I can't even imagine - but there is still seal hunting in eastern Canada, greatly deplored -- I believe the seal fur is exported to far outer regions of northern china or russia, don't know for sure. I can't imagine anyone wanting it. I doubt if the meat is used at all, but I don't know - engine oil?


Actually Cookie, right now the government of Newfoundland is paying a processing plant to buy the skins of the baby seals and warehouse them because there is no market for the remains of these babies. The EU banned the importation of seal skins a few years ago and the Harper government has spent millions on trying to get the courts to force the EU to take a product that they don't want. I believe he even tried to get China to buy them and that didn't pan out either. As for Russia, I think they're also not allowed into that country either.

The seals that are killed are between 12 days and 3 months old when they're slaughtered. Most of them haven't even had a solid meal of fish yet and haven't been in the water either. Truly babies. And after they are skinned (sometimes before they've finished dying apparently), the little bodies are left there on the ice.

Many activists are pushing the government to buy out the sealers and end this mass killing but he'd rather try to force other countries to take products that they don't want!
 
All marine mammals are protected in Australian waters.
They cannot be hunted, killed or harassed in any way.
I don't actually believe that there is a population with seal numbers in Sth Australia.

I'll try to find out what it is really all about.
 
It's about fish. Fur seals eat fish and so do people.

If we start slaughtering fur seals because they are in competition with the fishing industry then we will be no better than the Japanese who round up dolphins into shallow water then carry out horrific mass killings. There has to be a better solution than this.

Interesting that the MP keeps calling them New Zealand fur seals as if they are some feral species. The seals are actually an indigenous species Arctocephalus pusillus — also known as the Australian Fur-seal, Australo-African Fur-seal, New Zealand fur seal and long-nosed fur seal.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-07-...r-seals-in-south-australia-criticised/6590166

http://www.vice.com/read/south-australia-wants-to-solve-their-seal-problem-with-underwater-bombs

640px-Australian_Seals.jpg
 



The seals that are killed are between 12 days and 3 months old when they're slaughtered. Most of them haven't even had a solid meal of fish yet and haven't been in the water either. Truly babies. And after they are skinned (sometimes before they've finished dying apparently), the little bodies are left there on the ice.



How horrible! It made me think of the recent news of abortionists and Planned Parenthood selling tiny human baby parts who never got to breathe air or have a drink of mother's milk!! Now baby seals! Oh my goodness!
 
Some background

[h=3]Recovering from the slaughter[/h] In Australia the commercial harvest of seals for the fur trade began in 1798. The industry had collapsed by the 1830s, and although it was still legal to hunt seals until 1923, this rarely occurred.

Four species of seal once bred in Tasmania's Bass Strait, the Australian fur seal, New Zealand fur seal, Australian sea lion, and the Southern Elephant seal.

Three of these species were totally eradicated and only the Australian fur seal now remains in Bass Strait. Approximately 17 000 pups are born each year at both Tasmanian and Victorian breeding colonies and the total Australian fur seal population is estimated to be 60 000 to 80 000. Prior to the exploitation of the sealing industry there was an estimated 3/4 of a million seals in Bass Strait.

The New Zealand fur seal is now restricted to breeding on a small group of islands off the South coast of Tasmania, the Maatsuyker Island group, where approximately 100 pups are born each year. The New Zealand fur seal is now classified as a threatened species in Tasmania.

Although this species no longer breeds in Bass Strait the New Zealand fur seal breeds in South Australia and Western Australia and has a total population of approximately 35 000.


[h=3]Threats to seals[/h] Entanglement in marine debris is a constant threat to seals


The greatest threat to seals comes not from their natural predators, white pointer sharks and killer whales, but from humans. Seals are shot (illegally) by fishermen, and caught and killed as 'accidental by-catch' in fisheries operations such as trawling and gill netting, while the ingestion of waste oil and other liquid pollutants poses a further threat to seals.

Seals also suffer horrific deaths due to marine pollution, such as entanglement in marine debris. This plastic, non-biodegradable debris includes free-drifting trawl net, packaging straps and monofilament gill net. Such debris causes 2% of Tasmania's seals to suffer a slow strangulation.

http://www.parks.tas.gov.au/?base=4918

And this from the Sth Australia Museum


Dr Shaughnessy says he was recently consulted by the South Australian Government as some people want permission to cull the animals.

"The tuna operators want to cull them because the New Zealand Fur Seals get into their nets. They want permission to kill animals they claim they can recognise. And we say, well how can you recognise them? And if you do kill them, three or four others are going to come and replace them quick smart. In addition, some people have applied for permission to shoot the seals on the Capes on Kangaroo Island."

Dr Shaughnessy advised the NRMB that culling would be a bad idea. He says after all, the population of New Zealand Fur Seals on Kangaroo Island will not keep multiplying forever.


"There will be limiting factors. Either they'll run out of space or they'll get to the limit of their food." Dr Shaughnessy believes that it'd be a waste of time trying to interfere, as the populations wouldn't change significantly unless enormous numbers were removed, not to mention the impact on the tourism industry.


http://www.samuseum.sa.gov.au/media/unlocked/kangaroo-island-seal-survey
 


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