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Released: 12 December, 2001
Dhaliwal Announces Consultations On Report Of Eminent Panel And Maintains Tac For 2002 Sealing Season
December 12, 2001
OTTAWA -- The Honourable Herb Dhaliwal, Minister of Fisheries and
Oceans, today accepted the final report of the eminent Panel on seal management.
"I would like to thank the members of the Panel for their dedicated
work. I know that this is an important issue for many Canadians and this is why
I established the Panel," said Mr. Dhaliwal. "The findings in this
report will help us develop seal population management strategies that are based
on the best available science and that offer a balanced perspective on seal
harvesting."
"Given that this process will take some time and needs to be done with
careful attention, I have decided to maintain the existing management measures
for the 2002 sealing season," said Mr. Dhaliwal. "Since the seal
population is healthy and abundant, these management measures should not affect
the status of the stock."
For 2002, the Total Allowable Catch (TAC) will remain at 275,000 animals. The
hooded seal TAC will remain at the 1998-2001 level of 10,000 animals. As in the
2001 management plan, a small harvest of grey seals will be allowed in areas
other than Sable Island. Also, the licence conditions put in place in 2000 to
prohibit the harvest of whitecoats and bluebacks will remain in place.
While the Panel did not provide an optimum population size for the various
seal species, it did examine several different management strategies that will
be considered carefully by the department. Over the next year, DFO officials
will take the necessary time to consult with interested stakeholders to develop
a long-term management plan for the following season, based on the findings and
recommendations contained in the Seal Panel report.
The mandate of the Panel, established in April 2000 in response to the
Parliamentary Standing Committee on Fisheries and OceansĀ' report on seals,
included a review of:
- scientific
methodologies for estimating seal populations;
- scientific
methodologies for estimating the total magnitude of the hunt;
- the current
state of knowledge about the diet of seals and the impact of seal
consumption on cod and other commercial fish stocks; and,
- the optimum
size of the harp seal population in terms of its interaction with the
ecosystem and commercial fish stocks.
Members of the Panel included:
- Dr. Ian
Mclaren as Chair, currently President of the Sable Island Preservation
Trust;
- Professor
John Harwood, Scientist at the Sea Mammal Research Unit of the University of
St. Andrews, United Kingdom;
- Mr. David
Vardy, currently Chair of the Public Utilities Commission of Newfoundland;
and
- Dr. Solange
Brault, Assistant Professor at the University of Massachusetts, Boston.
The PanelĀ's report is available on the departmental website at http://www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/seal-phoque/reports/index.htm
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Heather Bala
Director of Communications
Office of the Minister
Fisheries and Oceans Canada
Ottawa
(613) 996-0076
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Myriam Brochu
Manager, Media Relations
Fisheries and Oceans Canada
Ottawa
(613) 998-1530
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