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British Columbia

Coast guard throws technology behind protecting southern resident killer whales

The newly announced Marine Mammal Desk will use radar and real-time vessel tracking to keep ships away from whales.

Marine Mammal Desk will use radar and real-time vessel tracking to keep ships and whales apart

Several orcas are pictured swimming in the ocean with mountains in the background.
The Canadian Coast Guard's new Marine Mammal Desk aims to keep ships away from whales off B.C.'s coast. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press)

The Canadian Coast Guard is throwingtechnology behind an effort to better protect southern resident killer whales and othercetaceans in B.C. waters from ship traffic, vessel strikes and entanglements.

In a release, Fisheries and Oceans Canada saysa "first of its kind" marine mammal desk will work to"report whale sightings in real time and advise vessel traffic by providing enhanced situational awareness of the activities of endangered southern resident killer whales and other cetaceans, such as humpback and grey whales."

Located within coast guard operations in Sidney, B.C., the desk has been up and running since late October 2020 and is staffed 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Five officers have received specialized training to run the operation.

"We're really excited about it," said Scott Rear, who works in communications and traffic services with the Canadian Coast Guard.

"We're hoping in the spring whenvessel traffic increasessignificantly as well as when wesee the return of more cetaceans, we'll have the procedures and policies more polished than they are right now."

According to the release, the desk will "leveragemodern technologies including radar and automatic identification systems (AIS) and real-time vessel movement information."

It will also monitor no-go zones for boats that have been put in place to give sanctuary to southern resident killer whales, and willtake in reports of whale sightings and then forward them to marine enforcement agencies.

"The southern resident killer whale is an icon of our Pacific coast, and we want to see its population protected and revivedfor generations to come," saidBernadette Jordan, Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard.

The release said the desk is part of the Canada Energy Regulator's recommendations on the Trans Mountain Expansion Project to help safeguard the whales by offsetting the risk of increased underwater noise and vessel strikes.