Fabulous Dolphins and Whales Die From Neglect
Some of the world’s largest and most beautiful dolphins and whales are rapidly disappearing because of pollution and neglect. Take a good look at these because you might never see them again.
Whales have been important to communities around the world for thousands of years. They have provided meat, fat, tools (from whale bone), leather and gut. These fabulous creatures have been (and still are), so useful that they have been over exploited and their numbers are rapidly dropping.
A recent survey showed that there are eleven species of whale around Canada but seven of these are now endangered. Similar trends have been noted in other parts of the world. Human activity is the biggest single cause of this depletion in numbers.
Commercial whaling, collision with ships and getting tangled in fishing gear kills thousands of whales every year. Their habitat is also being destroyed by pollution from chemicals and rubbish, but on a far more serious level, their whole way of communicating via sonar is being destroyed by noise pollution. These sensitive creatures use a very sophisticated language to contact each other and call their young. Modern sonar on ships and busy radio frequencies, are interfering with this.
The world’s most endangered cetacean is the Chinese River Dolphin, which is also known as the baiji.

The baiji is a white, fresh water dolphin. This long nosed dolphin lives in groups of three, or four and feeds on fresh water fish. It was once revered as a Chinese River God but its number are thought to have dropped as low as 50 individuals. The only place in the world that it can be found is in the Yangtze River. The population and human activity along the Yangtze River is fast increasing and these creatures stand little chance of adapting to it, so a Baiji Sanctuary is planned in an ox bow lake next to the river in Hubei Province.
The North Atlantic Right Whale is now very precarious. It was once plentiful in North America and has been so intensely fished that its numbers have reached an all time low.

This whale is so rare that it was once thought to be extinct but it is now estimated that about 60 breeding females remain. These creatures are still being injured by fishing gear, nets, poles and ropes and are often found tangled in them, or severely injured by them. They also receive horrific injuries from collisions with ships. This is partly because they move slowly and spend a lot of time at the surface. (The very thing that made them easy to catch.)
Much is being done to ensure the safety and survival of this species but there is a long way to go.
Beluga Whales in the St. Lawrence River, in Quebec, are the most polluted creatures on earth. The bodies of dead belugas are considered to be toxic waste because they contain very high levels of PCB’s and DDT.

The belugas in the St. Lawrence are a small pocket of population. The Arctic is their normal environment. The hunting of these creatures was stopped in 1979 and in 1980 restrictions were placed on PCB’s a DDT that had been found in their bodies. Population was expected to grow by 3% per year but their population in the river has not changed and remains at between 1000 and 1200 individuals.
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Post Commentlonely
On April 24, 2008 at 5:57 am
Good work man.
Darlene McFarlane
On April 24, 2008 at 7:08 am
I never heard of the Right Whale before. Interesting article.
RJ Evans
On April 24, 2008 at 7:22 am
A subject close to my heart! Did you know that the reason the Right Whale is called that is because it was considered the “right whale” to catch? For the simple reason it was so slow and stayed close to the surface it was an ideal target for slaughter.
Plus, I am afraid I have bad news… After more than 20 million years on the planet, the Yangtze river dolphin was officially declared extinct in August 2007, the first species of cetacean (whale, dolphin or porpoise) to be driven from this planet by human activity.
An intensive six-week search by an international team of marine biologists involving two boats that ploughed up and down the world’s busiest river failed to find a single specimen. The idea was to catch any that were remaining andd try to begin a captive breeding project so that in future years they could be reintroduced.
To blame for its demise is the increasing number of container ships that use the Yangtze, as well as the fishermen whose nets became an inadvertent hazard.
This is no ordinary extinction of the kind that occurs frequently in a world of millions of still-evolving species. The Yangtze freshwater dolphin was a remarkable creature that separated from all other species so many millions of years ago, and had become so distinct, that it qualified as a mammal family in its own right. It is the first large vertebrate to have become extinct for 50 years and only the fourth entire mammal family to disappear since the time of Columbus, when Europeans began their colonisation of the world.
Sorry to bear the bad news….
Robert
Moses Ingram
On April 24, 2008 at 7:30 am
This is a very good article, I had no idea that there was so few of of these left. What is being done to protect them?
lanne
On April 24, 2008 at 10:08 am
Good work Louie. I am an absolute whale fanatic and find it hard to believe that it could come to this.
IcyCucky
On April 24, 2008 at 4:27 pm
Great information and so important for people to know.
Dee Huff
On April 24, 2008 at 6:47 pm
So sad that we cause so much harm to helpless creatures.
Lucy Lockett
On April 24, 2008 at 10:01 pm
And we still disregard the homes of other creatures and our home!
Ruby Hawk
On April 26, 2008 at 9:04 pm
We ae destroying our own habitat as we destroy theirs of ours. I don’t why humans are so careless of our creatures.
kereru
On March 5, 2009 at 6:51 pm
save our fishy friends
Annnnieeee
On June 20, 2009 at 12:49 pm
I am only 13 but still i love these animals beluga whale is so cute and the river dolphin looks so interesting. When i grow up i want to be a marine mammal conservationist to try and help with the ever depleting of these mammals.