Tuesday, July 10, 2012

CQ Researcher: Whale Hunting

Should whale and dolphin hunting be outlawed?
by Daniel McGlynn
CQ Researcher
June 29, 2012 • Volume 22, Issue 24

"For hundreds of years, the United States and countries around the world relentlessly hunted whales and other marine mammals for their oil, blubber and other byproducts. But today whales, dolphins and porpoises are widely viewed as intelligent creatures worthy of conservation and protection from commercial hunters. Scientists describe marine mammals as social animals that share characteristics with humans, including the ability to communicate in sophisticated ways. But Japan, Norway and Iceland still hunt whales, and Japan continues its controversial slaughter of dolphins for their meat, as dramatized by the Academy Award-winning documentary The Cove. Efforts to ban commercial whaling by the International Whaling Commission have failed because of political bickering and competing national interests. Meanwhile, climate change, entanglement in commercial-fishing gear and ocean noise pollution are adding to the peril facing marine mammals."

Read more about this topic and many other current issues in CQ Researcher. Full-text access is available from off campus with the current semester's passwords.

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