Virtual buoys and time triggered traps reduce risk to endangered North Atlantic right whale, but reactions among fishers in US and Canada are mixed

Ropes that spring to the water’s surface when summoned and virtual buoys could hold the key to saving one of the world’s most endangered whale species, scientists and conservation groups have said.

As the North Atlantic right whale nears the brink of extinction – amid reports of whales tangled in metres of thick fishing lines and findings suggesting 85% of the population have been entangled at least once – calls have grown for the adoption of ropeless fishing, using gear that does not involve any vertical lines.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Kenzo: widely copied rule-breaker who shook up Paris fashion

Kenzo Takada not only paved way for other Japanese designers but influenced…

UK health secretary says nurses’ pay demands not ‘reasonable or affordable’

Steve Barclay adds he is ‘saddened’ by the RCN’s proposed industrial action,…

Friday briefing: Failure on racial justice

Report by MPs criticises police and governments … anger in France over…