If krill disappears, whales will go extinct

With less than 10 centimeters of length and two grams of weight, the Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) is the main source of food for seabirds, seals and most of the whale species that use the waters of the Austral Whale Sanctuary as a feeding area. However, the Chilean Cetacea Conservation Center warns that in recent years the Antarctic krill fishery has undergone an accelerated expansion due to its use as feed for farmed salmon as well as for the food industry composed of natural substances and that promises to be therapy (Nutraceutical, they call it: you have to come up with a name to sell better).

Krill

Recently China, a country that has increased their activities and interests in Antarctica, announced that several Antarctic krill trawlers are preparing to set sail for the Southern Ocean, declared a Whale Sanctuary by the International Whaling Commission in 1994. The expedition is part of a five-year exploration program years to investigate the potential of this small crustacean in the expansion of fish culture.

The Antarctic krill fishing industry projections are bad news for the already over-exploited marine ecosystem. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), in 2009 80% of commercial fish species in the world were exploited at their highest level or at a higher level. On the other hand, marine researchers warned that overfishing has consumed 95% of the large species of fish in most of the world's oceans and some of them, such as bluefin tuna, are on the verge of extinction. Although the Antarctic krill population is not yet in danger, specialists fear that an accelerated expansion of its exploitation will increase the pressure on the Antarctic marine ecosystem, which is already threatened by the loss of ice, the increase in the temperature and the acidification from the ocean.

In addition, the Marine Stewardship Council last June certified as "environmentally sustainable" the Antarctic krill fishery developed by the Norwegian company Aker BioMarine. This company has a boat, called Saga Sea, which can pump and vacuum continuously thousands of tons of krill. As a result, the fishing season of this single vessel is equivalent to the catch capacity of several traditional trawler vessels.

The greatest concern of scientists is related to the food needs of other predatory species of Antarctic krill that inhabit the Antarctic coasts, where this species is fished. Although penguins and seals breed on land, they need to find food in the sea to feed themselves and nurture their young. If krill around their foraging areas are diminished by fishing, the animals will have to travel long distances to find food and this could negatively impact their ability to maintain and reproduce successfully. For the specialist Gerald Leape, director of the Project for the Conservation of the Antarctic Krill, the MSC "ignored irrefutable evidence on the threats to the Antarctic ecosystem when granting the certification".

If the krill disappears, so will the whales, seals, penguins and all the species that make up that food chain.

If you want to read more articles similar to If krill disappears, whales will go extinctWe recommend that you enter our category of Endangered Animals.

Popular posts