The authors of the following article are pleased to announce a new paper 
providing evidence that speed restrictions implemented in 2008 to reduce vessel 
related deaths of North Atlantic right whales along the East Coast of the 
United States have been effective.

 

Laist, D.W, A.R. Knowlton, and D. Pendleton.  2014.  Effectiveness of mandatory 
vessel speed limits for protecting North Atlantic right whales.  Endangered 
Species Research 23(2): 133-147.  
http://www.int-res.com/articles/esr_oa/n023p133.pdf

 

 

ABSTRACT: To reduce right whale Eubalaena glacialis deaths caused by ship 
collisions along the

US East Coast, a rule was implemented on 8 December 2008 requiring all vessels 
≥65 feet (19.8 m)

to travel 10 knots (18.5 km h−1) or less in 10 seasonal management areas 
(SMAs). To evaluate the

effectiveness of this rule, we plotted the locations of all right whale and 
humpback whale

Megaptera novaeangliae carcasses attributed to ship-strikes since December 1990 
in US waters to

determine their proximity to SMAs. In the 18 yr pre-rule period, 13 of 15 (87%) 
right whales and

12 of 26 (46%) humpback whales killed by ships were found inside later SMA 
boundaries or

within 45 nmi (83 km) of their perimeters during later active dates. In the 
first 5 yr after the rule

became effective, no ship-struck right whales were found inside or within 45 
nmi of any active

SMA. This was nearly twice as long as the longest pre-rule period without 
discovery of a ship-struck

carcass in those areas during effective time periods. Based on the 18 yr 
pre-rule period, bootstrap

resampling analyses revealed that the probability of finding no ship-struck 
whales in or near

SMAs during the first 5 yr post-rule period would be a statistically 
significant reduction in such

deaths (p = 0.031). The results suggest the rule has been effective at reducing 
right whale deaths.

We suggest enlarging SMAs to include additional parts of the right whale 
migratory corridor.

 

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