NATURAL RESOURCES
Coral Reef | Sea
Turtles | Whales
Whales:
Whales
and dolphins are an intricate part of the marine and coastal
fauna of the northeast Caribbean Sea. Humpbacks (Megaptera
novaangliae) accounted for approximately 80% of sightings
in the area. They aggregate most commonly off Rincón and
Aguadilla. They use these areas for breeding and calving.
Whales are high-end indicators of the health of the ocean habitat
and biodiversity. The physical destruction of important expanses
of natural habitat is a significant contributor to the decline
of whales. This generally includes development on land, which
alters physical oceanography and introduces pollution into the
habitat. Finally, development on land can also increase the
human population in the region, thus risking the crowding out
of whales.
The following information and the three quotes (which directly
relate to whale habitat degradation) are from: "Whales and Shared
Coastal and Marine Management of the Border Pacific" chapter
for Transboundary Environmental Management Issues Facing
Mexico and the United States to be published by the Regents
of the University of California in 2002.
"We must concentrate our attention on the parts of the ocean
that are within national jurisdictions. Not because the high
seas are unimportant but because both ocean life and the threats
to it are concentrated near land." (Woodard, 2000: 230)
There are three issues:
- "The
world's coastal areas are being overwhelmed with people
and pollution";
- (b)
"critical coastal resources . . . are being plundered in
the name of development and lost through inertia and neglect";
and
- (c)
"the inability of governments . . . to craft and implement
rational coastal management plans is having far-reaching
consequences" (Hinrichsen, 1998: 4)
"Actual removal of suitable habitat by the building of coastal
hotel resorts, breakwaters which change local current patterns
and encourage silting, and dams which regulate water flow in
rivers, all impose threats." (MacDonald, 1993: 175)
To learn more about Humpback whale migrate routes check out
the following website:
http://www.coastalstudies.org/research/yonah.htm
Reference:
1. Mingucci-giannoni, Antonio A. "Zoogeography of Cetaceans
off Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands", Caribbean Journal of
Sciences, Vol. 34, No. 3-4, pp. 173-190, 1998.
2. Mark Spalding
Coral Reef | Sea
Turtles | Whales
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A humpback whale raises his fluke
outside the line up at Rincón
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