Artenschutz

2
Feb
2005

Whale Stranding in N.C. Followed Navy Sonar Use

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A42788-2005Jan27.html

Whale Stranding in N.C. Followed Navy Sonar Use

Military Says Connection to Death of 37 Animals Is 'Unlikely'

by Marc Kaufman
Washington Post Staff Writer

Friday, January 28, 2005; Page A03

At least 37 whales beached themselves and died along the North Carolina shore earlier this month soon after Navy vessels on a deep-water training mission off the coast used powerful sonar as part of the exercise.

Although the Navy says any connection between the strandings and its active sonar is "unlikely" -- because the underwater detection system was used more than 200 miles from where the whales beached themselves -- it is cooperating with other federal agencies probing a possible link. Government fisheries officials, as well as activists for whales, say the fact that three species of whales died in the incident suggests that sonar may have been the cause.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration scientists "are looking at all the possible causes of this stranding, which was a significant one," spokeswoman Connie Barclay said. Although the number of whales that came ashore is far from a record for mass strandings, Barclay said that "it's very curious to have three different kinds of whales strand, and a number of possible causes are being examined. Sonar is certainly one of them."

The possible connection between naval sonar and the deaths of whales and other marine mammals has become an increasingly controversial issue since the Navy acknowledged that the loud blasts of its sonar helped cause a mass stranding of whales in the Bahamas in 2000. Since then, critics have accused the Navy of involvement in numerous mass strandings in U.S. and international waters, and federal environmental officials have concluded in some instances that the loud pulses from active sonar cannot be ruled out as a cause.

The North Carolina strandings could be especially problematic for the Navy because it hopes to establish a 500-square-nautical-mile underwater sonar testing range off that coast. The Navy says a draft environmental impact statement is near completion, and officials have said the range is a high priority.

Most of the animals that died in the latest incident were pilot whales, which stranded around the Oregon Inlet of the Outer Banks on Jan. 15. One newborn minke whale also beached at Corolla that day, and two dwarf sperm whales came ashore at Buxton on Jan. 16, locations about 60 miles north and south of the inlet. Six of the pilot whales were pregnant when they died, Barclay said.

None of the three whale species is considered endangered, though NOAA officials say their populations are relatively small and little understood in the Atlantic. But other endangered marine animals -- including right and humpback whales and numerous species of sea turtles -- regularly migrate through the waters off North Carolina.

Navy officials said that the USS Kearsarge Expeditionary Strike Group, based in Norfolk, was conducting an anti-submarine exercise about 240 nautical miles from the Oregon Inlet on Jan. 14 and 15.

In e-mailed answers to questions, the Navy said a review of activities after following the strandings concluded that "no Navy ships were using active sonar within 50 nautical miles radius" of the inlet on Jan. 15 or the four days preceding -- although one ship not associated with the strike group did use sonar for seven minutes about 90 nautical miles south-southeast of Oregon Inlet. The strike group was on its way to a deployment after the training exercise, the Navy said.

Sonar acts as the underwater eyes and ears of the Navy, and intermittent bursts are often used in transit to detect potential enemies and other dangers. In addition, Navy officials increasingly believe that inexpensive quiet submarines from hostile nations pose a potential threat and want to upgrade sonar tracking systems to protect against intrusions into U.S. coastal waters. The Navy now uses mid-frequency sonar for its tracking but wants to deploy a new generation of low-frequency sonar that travels much farther underwater and is more powerful.

The Navy has sometimes been slow to acknowledge that its ships were in an area where strandings occurred and has accepted responsibility only in the Bahamas event. Environmental activists said that track record makes them skeptical of the Navy's statements about the North Carolina strandings.

"The circumstances are troubling," said Michael Jasny, a lawyer for the Natural Resources Defense Council, which has sued the Navy on other sonar-related issues. "After so many whale deaths caused by sonar, these latest strandings are a red flag. . . . Unfortunately, the Navy has a long history of denial."

The Outer Banks area is close to the Norfolk base and on the general course to where the exercises were held.

Most of the stranded whales were dead when they were found, and NOAA scientists are conducting necropsies of many of the animals to try to determine a cause of death. Although pilot whales travel in herds and are prone to strandings, the other two whale species are not, officials said.

Pilot and dwarf sperm whales are both deep-diving animals that feed off the ocean floor and slopes of the continental shelf. The other whale strandings linked to sonar use have also involved deep-diving species, such as the beaked whale. Researchers have theorized that the loud sounds of sonar can damage the whales' sensitive hearing system and cause them to surface too quickly from fright. After another stranding off the Canary Islands in 2002, researchers found unusual gas bubbles in some whale organs -- leading them to conclude that the animals suffered from a form of decompression sickness similar to the bends.

The Navy's plan for an East Coast underwater sonar testing range was first announced in 1996. Since then, the plan has been discussed internally and work on an environmental impact statement has proceeded, with some input from NOAA.

A Navy spokesman said last year that a final decision had not been made on where to locate the test site. But in April, the Atlantic Division of the Naval Facilities Engineering Command said in a statement: "The Navy's preferred site for the range is in the Cherry Point Operating Area located in Onslow Bay, southeast of New River, North Carolina, and approximately 105 km (57 nautical miles) from the North Carolina shoreline."


Informant: ItalysBadBoy

31
Jan
2005

Defend The Filibuster

Act Now: Defend The Filibuster

by People For The American Way

The only way a minority can stand up to the majority in the Senate is via filibuster. Lend your support to this legislative endangered species:
http://tompaine.com/action/#003534

28
Jan
2005

Viktoriasee ist "Bedrohter See des Jahres 2005"

2. Februar 2005: Viktoriasee ist "Bedrohter See des Jahres 2005" (28.01.05)

Der ostafrikanische Viktoriasee ist der "Bedrohte See des Jahres 2005", teilt die Umweltstiftung Global Nature Fund (GNF) zum Welttag der Feuchtgebiete mit. Mit der Ernennung will der GNF auf den dramatischen Fischrückgang, die Zerstörung der Ufervegetation und die wachsende Verarmung der am See lebenden Bevölkerung aufmerksam machen. Der Viktoriasee im afrikanischen Länderdreieck Kenia, Tansania und Uganda ist mit einer Fläche von 68.800 km2 Afrikas größter See. Gefahr droht dem See durch Überfischung. "Allein am kenianischen Ufer des Sees ist die Zahl der Fischer wegen der schlechten Wirtschaftslage in den letzten Jahren stark gestiegen und liegt mit 55.000 fast doppelt so hoch wie von Experten empfohlen", so Dr. Obiero Onganga von der Umweltschutzorganisation OSIENALA, einem Partner des GNF im Seenschutznetzwerk Living Lakes.

Die ganze Nachricht im Internet:

http://www.jpberlin.de/www.ngo-online.de/ganze_nachricht.php4?Nr=10314

Trophäenjagd auf Grönlands Eisbären

Artenschutz: Trophäenjagd auf Grönlands Eisbären (28.01.05)

Grönland will zukünftig Eisbären durch Hobbyjäger abschießen lassen. Das meldet die Artenschutzorganisation "Pro Wildlife". Neben einer zunehmenden Gefährdung der Tiere durch Klimaveränderung und Umweltgifte sei die Trophäenjagd ein weiterer Schlag gegen die Eisbären. Die Biologin Daniela Freyer von "Pro Wildlife" führt die Jagd auf die Profitgier zurück: Hobbyjäger gäben zwischen 15.000 und 30.000 Euro für einen selbst geschossenen Eisbären aus. Die Jagd widerspreche internationale Schutzabkommen, die den unkontrollierten Abschuss und Handel unter zu beschränken versuchten. "Jagdreiseveranstalter im Ausland wittern das große Geschäft - doch weder die Eisbären noch die Menschen in der Region werden von der Jagd profitieren", sagt Freyer. Bislang sei in Grönland nur den Ureinwohnern die traditionelle Jagd auf Eisbären erlaubt worden.

Die ganze Nachricht im Internet:

http://www.jpberlin.de/www.ngo-online.de/ganze_nachricht.php4?Nr=10309

27
Jan
2005

Action Alert for Protection of Wild Horses

From the International Society for the Protection of Mustangs and Burros…

Carrie Dann


Western Shoshone Defense Project
P.O. Box 211308
Crescent Valley, NV 89821
(775) 468-0230
Fax: (775) 468-0237
http://www.wsdp.org



-----Original Message-----
From: International Society for the Protection of Mustangs and Burros [mailto:ispmb@lakotanetwork.com]
Sent: Wednesday, January 26, 2005 6:44 PM
To: Carrie Dann
Subject: RE: ACTION ALERT:


Dear Friends of Wild Horses,

We have just gotten word that a bill is being introduced into Congress (it is in the House Resources Committee now) for reinstating the protections previously afforded to America's wild horses and burros. This BILL will stop the proposed slaughter of more than 8,000 wild horses!

WE NEED YOU TO ACT IMMEDIATELY BY:

· Write and e-mail and phone your Representative and Senators and ask that they SUPPORT HR 297 presented by the Honorable Rep Nick J. Rahall (D-WV). Please ask them to bring the bill to the floor of the Congress.

· Let Representative Rahall know how thrilled you are that he has taken action to save America's icon, the wild horses and burros.

· Let them know that wild horses and burros are the great symbol of our country and represent the freedom we so cherish. Let them know you want them protected from slaughter FOREVER.

· We need letters and e-mails to go out immediately.

· We are asking that you pass this on to as many people as possible to write.


http://www.congress.org

Sample letter:

Dear Honorable (Senator/ Representative):

We are asking for your help today to restore to the rightful place the position that wild horses hold as the great American symbol of freedom that our country so cherishes. Would you please support Representative Rahall's bill HR 297 that is to be introduced into the 109th Congress from the House Resources Committee.

This bill will stop the slaughter of over 8,000 wild horses in our country and restore the protections afforded to wild horses and burros that they have deserved over the past 34 years. By voting for this bill it also will restore the public's confidence in our Congress by assuring that it operates under the principals of "for the people and by the people"

As you know, the support for wild horses crosses all political, cultural, and social lines. This is why we are asking that you support this bill. When the rider #142 was surreptitiously added to the appropriations bill last November, it was done without the will and support of the American people.

We trust that you will rectify this terrible injustice done to our "last living symbol of the West," our wild horses and burros.


Sincerely,



January 25, 2005

WILD HORSE SLAUGHTER PROHIBITION MUST BE REINSTATED

WASHINGTON, D.C. - Wild horses roaming across our public lands, a symbol of the American West, would no longer be doomed to certain slaughter under legislation introduced today by U.S. Rep. Nick J. Rahall (D-WV). Rahall is the Ranking Democrat on the House Resources Committee, which has jurisdiction over wild horse policy on federal lands.

"Very few icons of the West remain, and wild horses are certainly a symbol of the frontier era and our nation’s spirit. To allow them to be slaughtered without exhausting all other options, such as adoption, is an affront to our history," declared Rahall.

Rahall’s legislation addresses a provision inserted in a must-pass appropriations bill last year that allows the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and Forest Service to essentially turn a blind eye to individuals or corporations who buy these animals with the clear intention of cruelly slaughtering them for profit. The Rahall legislation would restore the prohibition on the commercial sale and slaughter of wild free-roaming horses and burros.

"It has been illegal for the past 33 years to sell or transfer wild horses and burros for processing into commercial products because many Americans abhor the thought. They would be aghast to know that these animals now can and will be slaughtered so their meat can be offered on menus in France, Belgium and Japan," stated Rahall.

The current slaughter policy does not acknowledge the fact that humane alternatives exist and federal agencies have the authority to carry out such actions as adoption, sterilization, relocation, and placement with qualified individuals and organizations.

"To suggest that an acceptable solution to a federal agency’s management dilemma is commercial slaughter is an irresponsible approach to our public lands and the wildlife that roam them," said Rahall.

The federal government has a mediocre record in enforcing wild horse and burro protection laws. But instead of addressing these long-term and widespread management problems, the recent change is simply a quick and dirty fix. Under the guise of "managing" these living symbols of the American West, the agency is now permitted to allow the slaughter of animals that they had been previously charged with their protection."A public outcry has again begun across the United States over the change in law that now allows this disgraceful deed. We need to act before it is too late for thousands of these animals," concluded Rahall.


Karen A. Sussman
President, ISPMB
PO Box 55
Lantry, SD 57636
Tel: 605.964.6866
Cell: 605.365.6991
Saving America's Wild Horses & Burros since 1960

http://www.ispmb.org

Man-made Marine Disaster to worsen?

ECOP-marine - Investigative reporting into the murky waters of East-African sea-fisheries (CL 2004) - please distribute widely

Kenya: Man-made Marine Disaster to worsen?

The battle for fish, shrimps, octopus, squid and lobster escalates in the Western Indian Ocean. Consumers must wake up. Malindi/Kenya - 26. 01. 2005 wtn - While the most recent Tsunami has spared the coastal areas of Kenya and the tidal waves nowhere reached above the high-water mark, the threat to the coastal ecosystems continues to come from within.

Please read the full text at: http://www.ecop.info/e-news/e-news-05-01-1.htm

20
Jan
2005

Italien will seltene Vögel zum Abschuss freigeben

Artenschutz: Italien will seltene Vögel zum Abschuss freigeben (20.01.05)

Die italienischen Regierung plant die Jagd auf Vögel zu lockern. Das meldet die Umweltstiftung Europäisches Naturerbe (Euronatur). Künftig soll die Jagdsaison verlängert, die Zahl der jagdbaren Vogelarten von 36 auf 41 erhöht und die Haltung von lebenden Lockvögeln vereinfacht werden. "Bei illegalen Abschüssen sollen nur noch Bußgelder und keine Haftstrafen mehr verhängt werden können und zum Training von Jagdhunden könnte dann selbst in Naturschutzgebieten ganzjährig gejagt werden", berichtet Vogelexperte-Martin Schneider-Jacoby von Euronatur.

Die ganze Nachricht im Internet:

http://www.jpberlin.de/www.ngo-online.de/ganze_nachricht.php4?Nr=10227

18
Jan
2005

Beached Whales in N.C.

The following is taken from today's edition of the New York Times:

At Least 34 Whales Dead, Beached in N.C.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Published: January 17, 2005


Filed at 11:27 a.m. ET

MANTEO, N.C. (AP) -- Scientists and National Park Service workers were working Sunday to collect samples and clean up whale carcasses after 34 of the marine mammals beached themselves and either died or had to be euthanized.

Dozens of whales beached themselves early Saturday along a five-mile stretch of coastline near Oregon Inlet, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said. Twenty-four pilot whales died, and another seven were euthanized because they were suffering, the National Park Service reported.

A single minke whale was found dead in Corolla, the Virginian-Pilot reported. Two pygmy sperm whales turned up Sunday morning near Buxton -- one already dead, and one so sick that it also had to be euthanized, NOAA Fisheries biologist Barbie Byrd said.

"We're hoping that this is all of them,'' she said.


Informant: Millennium Twain


News results for BEACHED WHALES
http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=149495;article=74447;show_parent=1

ELF and beached whales and dolphins
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/472964/

14
Jan
2005

ELF and beached whales and dolphins

I am reading of various frequencies tonight and ELF caught my attention:
http://hypertextbook.com/facts/2001/LisaWu.shtml

These transmission are altering the web of life, and it is most apparent in the ocean due to it's electrical conductivity and it's water not air. (Observing that our bodies are mini oceans)... if there is ELF testing occuring in an area that is experiencing beached whales and or dolphins then if must me that it is harmonizing with their own auditory interface and the change is so drastic it drives them to crazy actions/death.

Dru


Beached Whales in N.C.
http://omega.twoday.net/stories/478437/

6
Jan
2005

Another Right Whale Feared Dead This Week

Three right whales, the most endangered mammal on earth, may have died this week, according to information obtained by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER). Two whales had been sighted off the North Carolina Coast entangled in fishing gear, and one of these has been confirmed as a right whale.

http://www.peer.org/press/548.html
logo

Omega-News

User Status

Du bist nicht angemeldet.

Suche

 

Archiv

April 2025
Mo
Di
Mi
Do
Fr
Sa
So
 
 1 
 2 
 3 
 4 
 5 
 6 
 7 
 8 
 9 
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Aktuelle Beiträge

Wenn das Telefon krank...
http://groups.google.com/g roup/mobilfunk_newsletter/ t/6f73cb93cafc5207   htt p://omega.twoday.net/searc h?q=elektromagnetische+Str ahlen http://omega.twoday. net/search?q=Strahlenschut z https://omega.twoday.net/ search?q=elektrosensibel h ttp://omega.twoday.net/sea rch?q=Funkloch https://omeg a.twoday.net/search?q=Alzh eimer http://freepage.twod ay.net/search?q=Alzheimer https://omega.twoday.net/se arch?q=Joachim+Mutter
Starmail - 8. Apr, 08:39
Familie Lange aus Bonn...
http://twitter.com/WILABon n/status/97313783480574361 6
Starmail - 15. Mär, 14:10
Dänische Studie findet...
https://omega.twoday.net/st ories/3035537/ -------- HLV...
Starmail - 12. Mär, 22:48
Schwere Menschenrechtsverletzungen ...
Bitte schenken Sie uns Beachtung: Interessengemeinschaft...
Starmail - 12. Mär, 22:01
Effects of cellular phone...
http://www.buergerwelle.de /pdf/effects_of_cellular_p hone_emissions_on_sperm_mo tility_in_rats.htm [...
Starmail - 27. Nov, 11:08

Status

Online seit 7707 Tagen
Zuletzt aktualisiert: 8. Apr, 08:39

Credits