Dear colleagues,

The World Cetacean Alliance welcomes your views on an initiative to protect 
important sites around the world where people and cetaceans interact in a 
respectful way.
A Whale Heritage Site (WHS) is an outstanding example of a place where 
authentic and 
respectful<applewebdata://169F980A-4A4B-417D-8DC2-C3EA800D80F3#-8863238968785944536_-943332202__ftn1>
 interactions take place between wild cetaceans and people, and where this is 
also embraced in the cultural, economic, social, and political lives of 
associated communities.

The Whale Heritage Sites initiative is entering its third public consultation 
phase between now and 31 March and we welcome your thoughts, comments and ideas 
to help ensure that the criteria and processes are as effective as possible. 
Please take 10 minutes to complete our online survey here:

https://surveyplanet.com/56df3b3ac05c3c071b3bff43

Alternatively you can read the full background and criteria by following these 
links and commenting directly by emailing 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.

Background: http://whaleheritagesites.org/about/

Criteria: http://whaleheritagesites.org/draft-criteria/

The WCA would like to thank the many people that have kindly given their time 
to contribute to the development of the WHS initiative and we would like to 
thank everybody able to contribute through the current survey or via direct 
comments.


FURTHER INFORMATION

Whale Heritage Sites are an innovative initiative aimed at increasing the 
protection and conservation of 
cetaceans<applewebdata://169F980A-4A4B-417D-8DC2-C3EA800D80F3#-8863238968785944536_-943332202_715215898__ftn1>
 (whales, dolphins and porpoises) and their habitats while contributing to 
sustainable livelihoods, the arts, science and education. Whale Heritage Site 
status will be granted to those places around the world where cetaceans are 
celebrated through art, education, research and cultural events; where 
sustainable practices and livelihoods are continually improved to ensure the 
health of cetacean habitats and long-term economic health of the community; and 
where respectful interactions between humans and cetaceans are supported 
through law, policy and cooperative efforts.

Whale Heritage Sites are high sea or coastal marine areas, and less often 
freshwater rivers and lakes, where cetaceans live or migrate through, and their 
associated land areas. WHS will be identified against criteria that interweave 
natural and cultural elements and acknowledge critical places that, for reasons 
of physical and social geography, are sites where people interact with 
cetaceans in an authentic and respectful way.

BACKGROUND

Cetaceans have played an important role in human culture for millennia. Dating 
back to prehistoric eras, their significance is reflected in Neolithic 
paintings on caves and cliffs. Revered as deities, guides, protectors and our 
ancestral spirits, people have sung about and celebrated cetaceans in myths, 
legends and true stories all over the world. To this day humans continue to be 
curious and enamoured by cetaceans, publishing hundreds of scientific papers 
each year and participating in an incrementally growing whale and dolphin 
tourism industry.

Nevertheless, this relationship has frequently been exploitative, with 
subsistence hunting taking place for centuries as a source of sustenance, and a 
commercial whaling industry that began in the 12th Century, triggering 
widespread population declines, many of which have yet to recover.

Yet from the 1960s onwards, people’s perspective on cetaceans changed as 
intensive scientific studies undertaken with both wild and captive animals led 
us to gain an insight into cetacean intelligence and began to reveal how they 
teach, learn, cooperate, scheme and grieve. Along with early recordings of 
their songs, a growing awareness of cetacean natural history and the Save the 
Whales movement of the 1970s and 80s led to a heightened interest in these 
charismatic mammals, creating a growing demand to see them in the wild.

Whale watching, the practice of observing cetaceans in their natural habitat, 
began in the United States of America in the 1950s and has become a tourist 
activity worldwide. A source of considerable scientific research, an 
educational platform for millions of people to learn about ocean conservation, 
and an important contributor to the creation of income for local communities, 
responsible whale-watching is now seen as an ethical alternative to holding 
cetaceans in captivity and as a potential long-term future for sustainable 
interactions with these animals in the wild.

WCA believes the development of a network of WHS, designated against carefully 
developed and robust criteria, can play an important role in distinguishing 
areas where cetaceans and people exist in harmony and mutual benefit. WHS will 
be confined to those places where human relationships with cetaceans are 
positive and not exploitative.

Regards,

Natalie Barefoot and Dylan Walker

Natalie Barefoot
Executive Director
Cet Law, Inc.
www.cetaceanlaw.org
Skype:  barefootnn
Tel:  +1.305.342.2602
[cid:5CB0AF37-A2C4-4CC9-B042-9C685630DCEF]
 [cid:72718BCC-1F93-451A-A700-D98AEB9A7B7B]

Dylan Walker
Chief Executive Officer
World Cetacean Alliance
T +44 (0)1273 355011<tel:%2B44%20%280%291273%20355011>   M +44 (0)7900 
471490<tel:%2B44%20%280%297900%20471490> S dylan.wca
E [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>   W 
www.worldcetaceanalliance.org<http://worldcetaceanalliance.org/>
A Studio 3, Lower Promenade, Madeira Drive, Brighton, BN7 2BU, UK


The World Cetacean Alliance (WCA) is a Partnership of over 70 non-profit 
organisations, whale and dolphin watching tour operators and individuals in 35 
countries worldwide working collaboratively to protect cetaceans and their 
habitats. World Cetacean Alliance, the Secretariat to the Partnership, is a UK 
registered Charity no. 1160484.

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