BajaNews - 6-9-2010 at 03:18 PM
http://www.mexidata.info/id2693.html
June 7, 2010
Arguably, it hasn't been the easiest time for sea lions on the Pacific Coast of the United States and Mexico. In Washington state's Puget Sound,
several animals have been shot to death in recent months. Last winter, the large sea lion population that usually dazzles tourists at San Francisco's
famed Pier 39 suddenly high-tailed it out the bay, only to gradually return in reduced numbers months later. On the southern tip of Mexico's Baja
California peninsula, fishermen are proposing a mass slaughter of the creatures because of competition over fish resources.
However, a Mexican environmental official contended the current sea lion population does not justify a slaughter. Benito Bermudez Almada, director of
the Baja California Sur office of the National Commission of Natural Protected Areas, said sea lion numbers have actually dropped in Baja California
Sur from 70,000 animals in 1978 to 30,000 in 2010.
"A huge massacre does not resolve the problem because the big sea lion colonies have diminished, such as in the case of Margarita Island where there
were 4,000 animals and now there are 1,200," Bermudez added.
Nonetheless, fishermen are lobbying Baja California Sur's state legislature to take action against sea lions. State lawmaker Natividad Osuna Aguilar
said a study is being prepared to examine the legal and socio-economic aspects of the sea lion situation.
Although the sea lion is a protected species in Mexico, a "harvest" could be approved if it is determined that the marine mammals are detrimental to
the local fishing industry, said Marco Antonio Gonzalez Vizcarra, director of the federal Secretariat of the Environment and Natural Resources in Baja
California Sur.
In recent years, controversies over sea lion populations have erupted at different places along the Baja California peninsula. As in the United
States, numerous illegal shootings of sea lions have been reported.