Dear colleagues, 

Randall Reeves and I just published the paper below in the "Food for Thought" 
section of the ICES Journal of Marine Science. 

Bearzi G, Reeves RR. 2021. Shifting baselines of cetacean conservation in 
Europe. ICES Journal of Marine Science, fsab137.
https://academic.oup.com/icesjms/advance-article/doi/10.1093/icesjms/fsab137/6324790

ABSTRACT-- Within just one human lifetime, the underlying motivation to 
conserve whales, dolphins and porpoises has shifted from being purely practical 
and anthropogenic to something much broader, reflecting a desire to protect 
populations as well as individual animals. In European waters, cetacean 
conservation currently tends to focus on direct and obvious threats, whereas 
those originating from widespread human encroachment and consumption patterns 
tend to be overlooked, even when they are pervasive enough to seriously affect 
cetacean populations. Cetacean habitat and prey rarely benefit from actual 
protection (including within Marine Protected Areas), while only moderate and 
often nominal protection is granted to the cetaceans, without clear 
conservation baselines and quantitative recovery targets. Meanwhile, historical 
baselines of cetacean diversity, abundance and distribution appear to be 
shifting, and the memory of past culling campaigns is fading. Here, we argue 
that!
  cetacean conservation should go beyond just avoiding further population 
decline or warding off the extinction of single species. Allowing only the most 
opportunistic and resilient species to persist, often by merely attempting to 
mitigate direct mortality (e.g. bycatch in fishing gear), should not pass for 
actual cetacean conservation. We should strive instead for the full recovery of 
multiple species throughout their historical ranges.

Cheers,
Giovanni Bearzi

- - - - - - -
Giovanni Bearzi
<http://www.dolphinbiology.org/people/giovanni_bearzi.htm>



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