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Grey Seal Cull: Making the Ethical Choice

Posted: 11/19/2012 8:09 am

On October 23, 2012, the Standing Senate Committee on Fisheries and Oceans tabled a report recommending the removal of grey seals in order to aid the recovery of cod and other groundfish stocks.

This study was expected since we are currently facing a serious problem: the risk of cod disappearing forever from our planet. Other species -- plaice, winter skate and white hake -- are also at varying degrees of risk.

After hearing from scientists, sealers, and animal welfare groups, my colleagues on the committee and I are convinced that grey seals, whose population has grown considerably, are one of the factors -- but not the only factor -- preventing cod stock recovery. We, therefore, recommended that the government remove 15,000 grey seals a year for four years out of a total population of 330,000 to 410,000 animals. Removal must be done humanely by experienced professionals under scientific supervision. In addition, the Liberal members on the committee insisted that the government develop a market for seal-derived products.

Obviously, this news provoked vegetarian lobby groups who advocate against the seal hunt -- indeed, all hunting, fishing and everything and anything remotely related to animals.

Their main argument is that there is no market for seal-derived products. Yet it would be entirely different if these lobby groups didn't do everything in their power to close these markets, because these markets do exist! These groups lobbied European parliamentarians and won a boycott on Canadian seal products in 2009. And when Canada announced in 2011 that it had entered into an agreement with China to sell its products from the seal hunt, the lobbyists mobilized no fewer than 50 organizations to derail the agreement.

Again, under pressure from these groups, the Russian government declared a boycott of Canadian seal pelts in 2011. Yet the Russian government, by announcing in February 2012 that canned seal meat could be sold in Russian supermarkets, proved that a market for seal-derived products does exist! Moreover, this market is so successful that Canadian products were exported to 35 countries between 2005 and 2011, bringing in US$70 million.

Do they believe that without a market there will be no seal harvest? Quite frankly, that is absurd! Scotland has managed its seal herds for decades by harvesting an annual quota. The fact that Europe, of which Scotland is a member, voted to boycott Canadian seal products hasn't stopped it from pursuing its own management. On March 15, 2012, the U.S. government lifted protection on sea lions in California to manage the herd threatening salmon stocks. Unfortunately, however, there is no market for seal or sea lion products in the United States, as it too has boycotted these products under pressure from vegetarian lobby groups.

So if closing markets does not protect animals, why shut them down? Simply to deal with powerful vegetarian lobby groups whose goal is to obtain a ban on animal-derived products with a bigger goal of a ban on all forms of hunting, fishing and livestock production, and, ultimately, making animal rights equal to human rights.

Morality: it is more ethical to humanely and sustainably harvest animals and subsequently market them, then it is to harvest them only to burn or let them rot. With or without a market, humans, who are part of the food chain, will always be predators and regulators -- unless humankind becomes vegetarian. This utopia which anti-seal-hunt lobbyists no doubt believe will happen one day comes at the cost of suffocating our regions by killing existing jobs and markets.

WARNING: GRAPHIC


Loading Slideshow...
  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    Seal hunters use a hakapik, a club used for killing seals, to kill a seal near their boat in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence March 31, 2008 near Charlottetown, Canada. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    Seal hunters skin harp seals on an ice floe March 30, 2001 in the Gulf of St. Lawrence in Canada. (Photo by Darren McCollester/Newsmakers)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    The bodies of harp seals, roughly twenty days old, lie on an ice floe March 27, 2001 in the Gulf of St. Lawrence in Canada. (Photo by Darren McCollester/Newsmakers)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    The carcass of a harp seal, roughly twenty days old, lies on an ice floe March 30, 2001 in the Gulf of St. Lawrence in Canada. (Photo by Darren McCollester/Newsmakers)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    The carcass of a harp seal, roughly twenty days old, lies on an ice floe March 30, 2001 in the Gulf of St. Lawrence in Canada. (Photo by Darren McCollester/Newsmakers)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    The carcass of a harp seal, roughly twenty days old, lies on an ice floe March 30, 2001 in the Gulf of St. Lawrence in Canada. (Photo by Darren McCollester/Newsmakers)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    Seal hunters carry dead seals in their boat in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence March 31, 2008 near Charlottetown, Canada. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    A policeman tries to remove female animal-rights activist Ashley Fruno (R), covered with a body-painting to look like the Canadian flag, during her one-woman anti-sealing protest by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) outside the Canadian embassy in Tokyo on March 24, 2010. (TORU YAMANAKA/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    Animal rights activists, Sir Paul McCartney(R) and then-wife Heather Mills McCartney get up close to a seal pup during a venture onto the ice floes of the Gulf of St-Lawrence before the start of the 2006 seal hunting season in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. (DAVID BOILY/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    Members of the organization for the defense of animals AnimalNaturalis protest naked and painted as bloody seals to protest the seal hunt in Canada on March 15, 2010. (Getty)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    Members of the organization for the defense of animals AnimalNaturalis protest naked and painted as bloody seals to protest against the seal hunt in Canada on March 15, 2010. (Getty)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    Inuit hunter Pitseolak Alainga (L) explains how the Inuit traditionally hunt seal to Canada's Finance Minister Jim Flaherty outside the Nunavut Legislature in Iqaluit, Canada, February 6, 2010. (GEOFF ROBINS/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    An animal-rights activist holds a baseball bat as he stands next to a person wearing a seal costume during a protest against the killing of seals in Canada on March 29, 2010 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Miguel Villagran/Getty Images)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    An animal-rights activist wears a mask depicting the face of a seal during a protest against the killing of seals in Canada on March 29, 2010 in Munich, Germany. (Photo by Miguel Villagran/Getty Images)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    People protest in front of the Canadian Consulates, on March 25, 2009 in Nice, south eastern France, to protest against the seal hunt in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence in Canada. (VALERY HACHE/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    Having recently returned from a trip out to the ice floes to collect seal heart valves for scientific research, local butcher and seal hunter, Rejean Vigneau (R) and AN employee (L) prepare seal meat in his meat shop on March 25, 2008 in the Magdalen Islands of Quebec, Canada. (DAVID BOILY/AFP/Getty Images)

  • Canadian Seal Hunt

    The Grim Reaper clubs a mock seal to death during a protest by the animal rights group PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animlas) in Hong Kong, 21 April 2006. (MIKE CLARKE/AFP/Getty Images)


 
FOLLOW CANADA BUSINESS
On October 23, 2012, the Standing Senate Committee on Fisheries and Oceans tabled a report recommending the removal of grey seals in order to aid the recovery of cod and other groundfish stocks. Thi...
On October 23, 2012, the Standing Senate Committee on Fisheries and Oceans tabled a report recommending the removal of grey seals in order to aid the recovery of cod and other groundfish stocks. Thi...
 
 
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08:23 PM on 12/01/2012
This article proves once again that outdated conservation strategy based on pre-ecological thought and faulty science is still being practiced. Not only that, but the paranoia that was once reserved for vegans is now extended to vegetarians. Paranoia will destoy 'ya.
08:38 AM on 12/01/2012
the argument of the animal rights camp is not that there is not market for seal products - that is totally wrong and misleading - the argument is that killing baby seals by clubbing them over the head is insanely cruel..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Warren Yuill
Jesus Built My Hot-Rod
08:43 AM on 11/21/2012
Norway has a commercial seal hunt and a recreational seal hunt.
15,000 seals culled every year for the last 50+ years.
Their codstocks are better managed and thus more abundant than ours.
Yet our officials at DFO are loath to follow their lead.
A typicaly canadian solution to problem solving?
Ignore what's been works elsewhere.
08:38 AM on 12/01/2012
humans are the worst culprits for over fishing particularly in the areas where they cull seals . so.. the logical next step..?
10:38 AM on 11/20/2012
How much fish will 10,000 seals consume 350,000 lbs. of fish per day or 2.45 million pounds of fish per week. An argument against the Seal hunt is that it is not humane, but in reality the Seal hunt is more humane than being eaten alive by sharks or killer whales. Opponents of the seal hunt use images of cute baby seals to garner support for the cancellation of the Seal hunt. However, it is illegal in Canada to kill baby seals. Since seals are knocked unconscious with a club it is understandable why people can think that the Seals are beaten to death but that is false. In his article “Rationality and the slaughter of seals” Dr Jeremy Cherfas states that “To deal first with the killing: if a humane death is one that is quick, painless and causes little distress and fear there can be no doubt that the method advocated for killing seals Is as humane as possible.The seal hunts are monitored closely by government and law to ensure that no inhumane activities take place. As for the moral imperative that somehow eating vegan does not harm animals is also a lie. There is a blood trail from every carrot to the table. Harvesting plants actually causes more animal deaths than raising meat. The kill rate on such farming is hundred times higher than raising meat animals or hunting them.
03:53 PM on 11/19/2012
The author says that Grey Seals are "one of" the reasons for the cod depletion...what are the other reasons and can we explore ways to exploit them first?
08:43 AM on 12/01/2012
humans are the other reason
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sdbest
Film producer, activist
02:46 PM on 11/19/2012
Senator Hervieux-Payette is either lying or is misinformed.

The "main" argument from groups opposing the grey seal cull was not "that there is no market for seal-derived products" as Senator Hervieux-Payette falsely claims. Although, in fact, there is almost no market for seal products, and that fact was raised. The main arguments of the independent scientists and groups who appeared before the committee related to cruelty and that the scientific consensus was there was no scientific basis, whatsoever, to conclude that reducing grey seal numbers will aid in the recovery of cod.

The only rationale for slaughtering grey seals is as "political" killings to assuage the ignorant hatred that most fishermen and fishing companies have for marine mammals. The political seal killings will do nothing to help cod recover, and may--as the expert testimony showed--even impede recovery, but the slaughter will help political parties win seats in parts of Atlantic Canada. Killing seals is bad for fish, it's bad for fishermen, but it's good for politicians.

It's worth noting that as long as they're not being fished cod are recovering in many areas, despite large, and possibly growing, seal populations. The only way that has been shown to actually aid in the recovery of cod and other commercial fish species is to stop fishing them until they fully recover--something Canada has yet to do. Killing marine mammals has never been shown to work.
02:36 PM on 11/19/2012
1 - The Senator's morale conumdrum is absurd. She presupposes that there must be a cull.
2 - The scientific validity of culling to improve cod stocks with no control over the other variables that affect fish stocks makes for poor science. So the culling 'experiment' is a no-go from a purely scientific perspective. (Please state the assumptions that will be used to address those other variables!)
3 - If the market were so great for seal products then why do other countries have such limited cull numbers? ('cuz we know if the market is good for something we humans tend to over-do it, not under-do.)
4 - We should stop pretending that seals are the reason for the cod fishery disappearing (that is still a big maybe) and recognize that sealing may be a replacement job to get $$ and seasonal employment numbers up. - Until we wipe out the seals then start pointing the finger at seal predators and start killing off orcas so that the seal population can recover.... Wow, does that sound familiar?)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AuntiFascist
Democracy is dead in Canada
01:32 PM on 11/19/2012
Time and time and time again Senator Celine Hervieux-Payette comes up with reasons and rationale to slaughter, hunt, or otherwise harm the seal population. It was Senator Hervieux-Payette who organized the seal meat day in the House with smoked, bacon wrapped seal. Her attitude towards seals borders on a fetish.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
D J B
10:38 AM on 11/19/2012
I love articles like this. Cod decline because of seals or because of us? Funny how you forget to mention that the one reason these fish - or any other endangered animal- is at risk is because of us, Senator. Yes, you fail to mention that. And it is yet another species that we are going to "cull" due to our problems. Another ridiculous article from a Canadian politician. Good job.
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albertarick
These are questions for wise men with skinny arms
09:23 AM on 11/19/2012
Culling seals, is just killing another mammal, that happens to eat the same thing we do. I don't think any one has a problem with traditional inuit hunters.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realitytrumpsbull
Two 'alves of coconut!
04:58 AM on 11/19/2012
Alternative suggestion, is it possible to put a dart gun to good use, here, and spread some kind of birth control medication, to help try and slow down reproduction rates? Or, might it be possible to lure/draw the animals out of a given area and cause them to congregate elsewhere besides in the area where fish are in jeopardy? In nature, which animals pose a natural threat to the seals? There might be other options besides hunting rifles to be explored.
08:06 AM on 11/19/2012
Attracting killer whales to them? I'm sure it would be possible. I'd certainly prefer a more balanced approach then sending in hunters too.