The Peterborough Examiner

Group sues to expand protected orca habitat along West Coast

- GENE JOHNSON

SEATTLE — An environmen­tal group sued President Donald Trump’s administra­tion Thursday to make officials move more quickly to protect the Pacific Northwest’s endangered orcas.

The recent grieving of one whale for her dead calf and scientists’ extraordin­ary attempts to save another from starvation highlight the urgency of their plight, the Tucson, Ariz.-based Center for Biological Diversity said as it filed the lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Seattle.

There are just 75 orcas remaining in the Pacific Northwest population, the lowest number in 34 years. They’re struggling with a dearth of chinook salmon, their preferred prey, as well as toxic contaminat­ion and vessel noise.

The lawsuit says the National Marine Fisheries Service has failed to act on the centre’s 2014 petition to expand habitat protection­s to the orcas’ foraging and migration areas off the coasts of Washington, Oregon and California — even though the agency agreed in 2015 that such a move was necessary.

The centre says the protection­s would help reduce water pollution and restrict vessel traffic that can interfere with the animals.

“Time is running out fast for these magnificen­t, intelligen­t orcas,” Catherine Kilduff, an attorney with the organizati­on, said in an emailed statement. “It’s heartbreak­ing to watch them starving to death and mourning their dead calves. Every day that Trump’s people delay action is a step toward extinction for these whales.”

The three orca pods that make up the so-called southern resident population have not successful­ly reproduced since 2015.

One orca, known as J35, drew internatio­nal attention as she carried her dead newborn on her head for more than two weeks — covering more than 1,600 kilometres — in a vain effort to help it live and breathe.

She finally dropped the decomposin­g calf and returned to feeding and frolicking with her pod.

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