Dear fellow humans,

It is later than you think for seals, fish, whales, etc. in Atlantic Canada. 
The fishing industry is proposing a Nova Scotia grey seal cull now that will 
in all likelihood exterminate this species. The smaller, "cuter" harbour seals 
can expect to be indiscriminately blown away too. Grey seals are being shot on 
a daily basis by fishermen now, and the only thing that will change is that a 
full-out blitz will be mounted once the Department of Fisheries and Oceans 
(DFO) gives its blessing to the project. "Management" of nature could not be 
more inept.

Killing seals will not offer one iota of assistance in the "rebuilding" of 
fish stocks that are generally faltering now, because the root of their problem 
lies in an alarming decline in plankton production. That is why fish are so 
small and lean now; they are starving. Seals naturally work towards stimulating 
plankton production, but perhaps that is beside the point. An important 
question is why DFO is keeping the plankton problem under their hat, why they are 
not coming clean to the fishing industry, and to the public, on the implications 
of this disastrous "unexpected" development. 

Where's the proof? It's in the gradual disappearance of a multitude of small 
plankton-feeding animal life along the shoreline. The public can easily see 
this. Barnacles, mussels, clams, snails, anemones, small fish, are all quietly 
disappearing from "pristine" coastal areas, and DFO is utterly silent on this. 
Pollution causes "too much" plankton growth, but these broad trends today 
point in the opposite direction. Proof of the plankton decline, spanning decades, 
can also be found in DFO's science data. 

Why the reluctance of science to discuss the mysterious plankton decline? It 
seems DFO lacks the courage to contemplate this evidence that the very 
foundation of their "fisheries science" is fatally flawed. For a short while longer 
DFO may be able to let the seals take the fall for this, because the general 
public does not suspect what is happening and has been brainwashed into 
believing that seals are some scourge that is "damaging" fisheries. 

Lobster fishermen are shooting seals on sight, even as they cannot understand 
why their prey, plankton-feeding lobsters, is getting physically weaker. 
Lobsters caught offshore Nova Scotia now are dying like flies. Top prices are only 
paid for the healthier inshore ones, and this is a new development. 
Food-stressed populations of fish and lobsters cave in from the outer edges first, in 
a 
pattern that has been amply shown by cod and many others before this. 
Lobsters are also vanishing to the north and the south, yet DFO and the lucrative SW 
Nova lobster fishery act as if it exists inside a magic bubble. 

Shrinking options for fish, lobster, and seal are all driven by faltering 
plankton - and each of these animals, under these stressful conditions, makes 
adjustments to accelerate the plankton-boosting aspects its own existence. Egg 
output (which feeds plankton) has been maxed out by fish and others, as "little 
ones" now unexpectedly carry roe. Thus ocean life strains to maintain its 
"balance." The more of these animals that we take out, the faster the whole living 
ocean endeavor sinks. But this version of the truth (the real truth?) is 
unspeakable. Best not to think about something so alarming, and people can instead 
continue to be "surprised" "shocked" and "dismayed" as marine animal life 
ever sickens and disappears. Thinking about all of this might be just too hard on 
the human head. But, wishing for a world in which problems can be solved by 
blowing off ones frustrations, by shooting seals, will not make it so. Once 
again, we will only "manage" to shoot ourselves in the foot. If we have no 
compassion for the now-very-hungry grey seal, can we find any for the future of our 
children?

Please take a couple of minutes to write a "letter to the editor" voicing 
your opinion on the proposed Nova Scotia grey seal cull. Whether you agree with 
me or not, a variety of views will make the media more likely to draw attention 
to this "contentious" issue. Letters to the Halfax Herald newspaper can be 
emailed to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] , these need to be short - not over 200 words - 
and you must include your name, address and phone number (although they will not 
print that). My arguments against the seal hunt can be found in greater 
detail at: http://www.fisherycrisis.com/seals/greysealhunt.htm 

The days are numbered during which DFO will be able to avoid openly 
discussing the whole truth of what they know about the changes in the ocean. It seems 
that only public pressure will be able to force it out of them, however. The 
fishing industry is not particularly keen to bring the nature of this disaster 
into sharp focus because the implications for their future are not good. Denial 
seems to be the most comfortable place for many fishermen to be. But that 
doesn't change the truth, and the truth is that the whole general public has a 
serious stake in a healthy ocean, in healthy plankton.

Debbie MacKenzie
http://www.fisherycrisis.com 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
PLANKTON
We're an indolent lot . . . 
Shiftless microscopic drifters. 
Here in the oceans a million trillion trillion of us just float and aimlessly 
worship the sun. 
We have no brains at all.
And we don't do anything at all except procreate with promiscuous abandon and 
generate most of the Earth's oxygen.
And we have no advice at all for you diligent bipeds who use your capacious 
intellects to so industriously befoul the seas.
For about two billion years we got along Quite well without you.
And without us, you will suffocate.

---From the poem Love and Anger by Gordon McCloskey. 




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