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| A critically endangered North Atlantic right whale swims off the coast of the northeastern US state of Massachusetts near Cape Cod Bay (AFP Photo/Don Emmert) |
Ottawa (AFP) - The first dead critically endangered North Atlantic right whale of 2019 has been spotted in Canada's Gulf of Saint Lawrence, the fisheries and oceans department said Wednesday.
The
ministry said in a release that the animal carcass had been spotted drifting in
the channel during an aerial surveillance flight on June 4.
"We
are currently assessing the recovery and necropsy options," it said.
The
Canadian government stepped up tracking of right whales after more than a dozen
were found dead in 2017 in the busy seaway and off the coast of New England in
the United States, which had prompted concern from marine biologists.
The area is
home to nearly one quarter of the world's last 411 right whales, according to
the most recent government figures.
The Marine
Animal Response Society, which is working with the department, identified the
deceased animal as a nine-year-old male known to researchers as Wolverine.
No deaths
were reported last year.
Ottawa last
year restricted snow crab fishing and the speeds of boats travelling in the
Saint Lawrence seaway to prevent more deaths.
Conservation
officials say that North Atlantic right whales are among the most threatened
species in the world.
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