An art exhibit in Seattle is highlighting the dire situation for orca off the coast of Washington.
The show, called SUPER POD: All Together features all the members of the endangered Southern Resident orca pods.
Gabriel Newton, the artist behind the project, painted the whales in acrylic on 45 pieces of wood found on the shores of the Salish Sea, where the whales travel and feed. He said the whales are struggling to hold on.
"It was inspired by wanting to raise awareness around the plight that they're in and the lack of food that they're experiencing," Newton explained. "And to motivate people to take action to help the orcas recover."
There were 74 members of the Southern Residents left when Newton started the project but a recent population analysis found there are only 72 left. Newton argued removing dams on the lower Snake River would allow more chinook salmon, which are the whales' main food source, to travel to the Pacific Ocean. The exhibit opens at the A/NT Gallery at Seattle Center Aug. 1.
Deborah Giles, science and research director for the nonprofit Wild Orca, said the lack of prey is the biggest issue for the Southern Resident orcas. She stressed drastic action is needed to save them, including curtailing fishing to ensure they have enough food.
"These whales are not recovering, and they're not recovering because we're not taking serious enough action with regard to fisheries management," Giles contended. "That's the bottom line."
Newton added it is critical to save the killer whales and salmon, not just for them but for us as well.
"Anytime a thread in the web of life is broken our own capacity to thrive is reduced," Newton asserted. "I view orcas and salmon as both very integral threads."
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The Wyoming Game and Fish Department will soon have a new director, and she's taking stock of the challenges ahead.
More than half of Wyoming's total acreage is public land, and it's the least densely populated state in the Lower 48. So the director of its Game and Fish Department has a big job managing wildlife and habitats.
Gov. Mark Gordon recently appointed Angi Bruce to the role, the first woman to helm the agency. She is scheduled to take office in September.
Bruce said the state has a strong legacy, including the highest population of greater sage-grouse in the country, and the longest mule deer migration corridor in the world. But as weather patterns change and public land use increases, Bruce said the agency will need to focus on habitat resiliency.
"So, really looking at how we can make our habitat even stronger and more resilient to have the wildlife be able to take in those stressors and maintain their healthy populations will be a huge priority in the next few years," she said, "but then over the next decade as well."
Wildlife conservation requires work across agencies, which Bruce said makes outcomes stronger. She's looking out for important upcoming federal decisions that will affect state wildlife management for greater sage-grouse and resource management in the Rock Springs area.
Bruce said the department faces challenges including wildlife diseases. Chronic Wasting Disease, for one, is a fatal condition that affects mule and white-tailed deer, elk and moose, and its steady spread has become more concerning in recent years.
"Disease is where we don't have all the answers," she said, "and we definitely need more work done both management and research to understand it."
In her first year, Bruce said, she will prioritize listening to others-both within her department and Wyoming citizens at large.
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The federal Bureau of Land Management has published a new plan for managing public lands which will put oil and gas management in sync with Colorado's big-game conservation policies.
Suzanne O'Neill, executive director of the Colorado Wildlife Federation, said the proposed final plan, which will impact BLM-managed lands in all 64 Colorado counties, is an important move to protect Colorado's iconic wildlife.
"It will help safeguard mule deer, elk, pronghorn and bighorn sheep habitats," O'Neill outlined. "These populations inhabit almost three quarters of the 8.3 million surface acres that the BLM manages."
The plan would amend management plans for 12 BLM field offices in Colorado by limiting active oil and gas sites to one per square mile in big-game high priority habitat. It also requires operators to minimize and offset direct, indirect and cumulative adverse impacts on wildlife. The BLM's proposed final Western Solar Plan revision is expected to be published this summer.
John Howard, former chairman of the Colorado Parks and Wildlife Commission during the Hickenlooper administration, believes the plan will give energy developers more certainty and should also cut the red tape found when dealing with multiple regulatory environments, which are not always on the same page.
"I think most of them are going to react very positively to having something that aligns so well between the federal government, the state government and local government," Howard projected.
The BLM is charged with managing lands owned by all Americans for multiple uses, including hunting, fishing, camping, rafting and hiking. O'Neill pointed to a 2020 report showing work is also needed to ensure trails and other recreation areas do not harm wildlife.
"They need to be appropriately sited, so they don't disturb wildlife that are birthing in the spring, or trying to migrate," O'Neill urged. "They need to be located in the right places."
Support for this reporting was provided by The Pew Charitable Trusts.
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Virginia's Marine Resources Commission is ending the winter blue crab harvest prohibition.
Crabbing is permitted from March to the middle of December. Extending the harvesting season targets adult female crabs which can harm this species' future. Environmental groups argued the Blue Crab Stock Assessment Committee's research does not support increasing the harvest.
Chris Moore, Virginia executive director for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation, said recent winter dredge survey results showed it is an ill-timed decision.
"For the last 8 or 9 years or so, we had actually seen higher numbers of adult females every year going back to 2016 except for 2022," Moore outlined. "That was the year where we actually saw the lowest number of crabs total in that winter dredge survey."
The most recent winter dredge survey showed a continued decline of about 20 million blue crabs in Chesapeake Bay. Moore noted the committee's decision is preliminary and depends on several previous determinations, ranging from the season's duration, number of participants, allowable catch and harvest location. A final decision is set for September.
Reopening the winter harvest will not endanger or eliminate blue crabs from Virginia waterways due to thresholds for the population. Moore thinks the committee should wait for a stock assessment with Maryland and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to be completed. Since the last one was done in 2011, he argued more is known about blue crabs.
"We continue to learn more about the population dynamics of the blue crab," Moore emphasized. "We continue to learn more about some of the predators of the blue crab, like catfish, and so we really need to be thinking about what is the state of the resource now when it comes to managing the species."
Moore added the stock assessment's results can better determine how to manage blue crab populations. Studies show around a quarter of the female blue crab population was removed from Chesapeake Bay by fishing in 2023, below both the threshold to pause the harvest and the target for sustainable blue crab fishing.
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