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Whale - Whales and Humans |  | Whale - Whales and Humans: Encyclopedia II - Whale - Whales and Humans |  | Main article Whaling
Most species of large whales are endangered as a result of large-scale whaling during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. For centuries large whales have been hunted for oil, meat, baleen and ambergris (a perfume ingredient from the intestine of sperm whales). Until the middle of the 20th century, whaling left many populations nearly or fully extinct. The International Whaling Commission introduced an open ended moratorium on all commercial whaling in 1986. For various reasons some exceptions to this mo ...
See also:Whale, Whale - Origins and taxonomy, Whale - Anatomy, Whale - Behaviour, Whale - Whale intelligence, Whale - Whales and Humans, Whale - Whales in culture |  | | Whale, Whale - Anatomy, Whale - Behaviour, Whale - Origins and taxonomy, Whale - Whale intelligence, Whale - Whales and Humans, Whale - Whales in culture, Cetacea (contains a species list), Baleen whale, Toothed whale, Dorsal fin, Whaling, International Whaling Commission, Exploding whale, Whale fall, List of whale species, Sitka Whale Fest |  | |
|  |  | Whale: Encyclopedia II - Whale - Whales and Humans
Whale - Whales and Humans
Main article Whaling
Most species of large whales are endangered as a result of large-scale whaling during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. For centuries large whales have been hunted for oil, meat, baleen and ambergris (a perfume ingredient from the intestine of sperm whales). Until the middle of the 20th century, whaling left many populations nearly or fully extinct. The International Whaling Commission introduced an open ended moratorium on all commercial whaling in 1986. For various reasons some exceptions to this moratorium exist; current whaling nations are Norway, Iceland and Japan and the aboriginal communities of Siberia, Alaska and northern Canada. For details, see whaling.
Several species of small whales are caught as bycatch in fisheries for other species. In the tuna fishery in the Eastern Tropical Pacific thousands of dolphins used to drown in purse-seine nets, until measures to prevent this were introduced. Fishing gear and deployment modifications, and eco-labelling (dolphin-safe brands of canned tuna), have contributed to an estimated 96% reduction in the mortality of dolphins by tuna fishing vessels in recent years. In many countries, small whales are still hunted for food, oil, meat or bait.
Environmentalists have long argued that some cetaceans including whales are endangered by sonar used by advanced navies. In 2003 British and Spanish scientists have suggested in Nature that the sonar is connected to whale beachings and to signs that the beached whales have experienced decompression sickness (see a BBC report about the Nature article or the Nature article itself (requires subscription)). Mass whale beachings do occur amongst many species (most of them are beaked whales that make use of echolocation system for deep diving). The frequency and size of beachings around the world, recorded over the last 1000 years in religious tracts and more recently in scientific surveys, has been used to estimate the changing population size of various whale species by assuming that the proportion of the total whale population beaching in any one year is constant.
Despite the concerns raised about sonar which may invalidate this assumption, this population estimate technique is still popular today. Researchers in the area (Talpalar & Grossman, 2005) support that is the combination between high pressure environment of deep-diving together with the disturbing effect of the sonar which causes decompression sickness and stranding of whales. Thus, an exaggerated startle response occurring during deep diving may alter orientation cues and produce rapid ascension. This hypothesis is based on direct effect of high pressure in the central nervous system of mammals: depression of synaptic activity and increased neural excitability.
Following public concern, the US Defense department has been ordered by the US judiciary to strictly limit use of its Low Frequency Active Sonar during peacetime. Attempts by the UK-based Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society to obtain a public inquiry into the possible dangers of the Royal Navy's equivalent (the "2087" sonar launched in December 2004) have so far failed. The European Parliament on the other hand has requested that EU members resist using the powerful sonar system until an environmental impact study has been carried out. [2]
Conservationists are also concerned that seismic testing used for oil and gas exploration may also damage the hearing and echolocation capabilities of whales. They also suggest that disturbances in magnetic fields caused by the testing may also be responsible for beaching. See e.g. Seismic testing and the impacts of high intensity sound on whales, Lindy Weilgart, Department of Biology Dalhouise University (PDF format) or a typical press release from Greenpeace on the issue
Other related archives1925, 1986, Alaska, Artiodactyl, Austroasiatic, Baleen whale, Baleen whales, Blue Whale, Book of Jonah, Canada, Cetacea, Clarence Darrow, Delphinidae, Dieffenbach, Dorsal fin, English language, European Parliament, Exploding whale, Ezekiel, Genesis, Ghana, Herman Melville, Hummingbirds, Iceland, Inherit the Wind, International Whaling Commission, Japan, Jerome Lawrence, Job, King James Version of the Bible, Kodiak, Linnaeus, List of whale species, Matthew, Moby-Dick, Nantucket, Nature, New International Version, Norway, Orcas, Pilot Whales, Platanistoidea, Qura'an, Scopes Trial, Siberia, Sitka, Sitka Whale Fest, Sperm Whale, Toothed whale, Vietnamese, Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society, Whale behaviour, Whale fall, Whaling, William Jennings Bryan, ambergris, baleen, baleen whales, bipedalism, blowholes, blubber, brain, bycatch, cetacean intelligence, chimpanzees, cow, dolphins, dorsal fin, echolocation, endothermic, evolution of cetaceans, families, fat, fish, heart, hominid intelligence, hominids, humpback whales, hunting of whales, insects, intelligent, keratin, language, lungs, mammals, metaphysical, natural history, natural selection, neocortex, opposable thumb, order, plankton, porpoises, predators, public inquiry, skin, sleep, social system, sonar, species, sperm whales, technology, toothed whales, vertebrae, virtuous cycle, whale beachings, whaling
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Whales and Humans", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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