Center for Biological Diversity: Help for Last Vaquitas: Seafood Import Ban Expanded

“It is estimated that just 10 vaquita remain alive on earth, down from an estimated 19 individuals in August 2019, and from around 560 animals in the 1990s. The population has been decimated by entanglements in gillnets set to catch shrimp and totoaba, another endangered species.”

Help for Last Vaquitas: Seafood Import Ban Expanded

In the northern Gulf of California, the most endangered marine mammals in the world — blunt-nosed, shy vaquita porpoises — have dwindled to around 10 individuals. Last week the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service finally announced a broad ban on imports of Mexican shrimp and other seafood caught in the near-extinct animals’ habitat.

The import ban places strong pressure on the Mexican government to stop the use of deadly gillnets that are entangling, drowning and killing vaquitas.

“This embargo is a crucial step toward ending the Mexican government’s utter indifference to the vaquita’s extinction,” said Sarah Uhlemann, our international program director. “President López Obrador has sat by and watched these tiny porpoises spiral toward oblivion. But money matters, and this embargo should finally get Mexico’s attention.”

US government expands vaquita-related Mexican seafood ban

By Cliff White
March 5, 2020

The U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) has expanded its ban on imports of shrimp and other seafood caught in the habitat of the critically endangered vaquita porpoise, which lives in Mexican waters in the northern Gulf of California.

It is estimated that just 10 vaquita remain alive on earth, down from an estimated 19 individuals in August 2019, and from around 560 animals in the 1990s. The population has been decimated by entanglements in gillnets set to catch shrimp and totoaba, another endangered species.

The U.S. Marine Mammal Protection Act mandates the U.S. government act to prohibit importation of seafood caught using fishing gear that kills marine mammals in excess of United States standards, Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) Senior Attorney Zak Smith said in a press release. The import ban is placing “enormous pressure on the Mexican government to stop the use of deadly gillnets that are entangling, drowning, and killing the vaquita porpoise,” he said.

“This is exactly how the law protecting marine mammals is supposed to work: if Mexico’s fisheries kill vaquita at a rate that violates U.S. standards, the U.S. must ban imports,” Smith said. “Mexico has no choice but to eliminate the destructive fishing taking place in the northern Gulf of California that is driving the vaquita to extinction. It’s the only hope the vaquita has for survival, and it is required if Mexico wants to resume exporting these products to the United States.”

Sarah Uhlemann, international program director at the Center for Biological Diversity, which along with the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Animal Welfare Institute have fought a long-running legal battle to implement the ban, over the objections of the administration of U.S. President Donald Trump, said scientists have warned that the vaquita will go extinct soon unless Mexico “fully and permanently bans all gillnets in the animal’s habitat and massively steps up enforcement.”

“This embargo is a crucial step toward ending the Mexican government’s utter indifference to the vaquita’s extinction,” Uhlemann said. “Since [Mexican] President Lopez Obrador took office, his administration has sat by and watched these tiny porpoises spiral toward oblivion. But money matters, and this embargo should finally get Mexico’s attention.”

In 2018, the U.S. Court of International Trade ordered the Trump administration to ban shrimp, chano, sierra, and corvina seafood imports from Mexico caught with gillnets in the vaquita’s habitat, per the  rules of the Marine Mammal Protection Act. The 4 March NMFS announcement expands that embargo to include almost all seafood caught in Mexico’s northern Gulf of California, including trawl-caught shrimp; all corvina, sierra, and sardines caught via purse-seine net; sierra caught with hook-and-line; and almost any seafood caught with a gillnet, including anchovy, herrings, sardines, mackerels, croaker, and pilchard, according to the Center for Biological Diversity.

“Consumers in the United States do not want to be complicit in the extinction of any marine mammal, and this is reflected in the MMPA’s mandate,” said D.J. Schubert, a wildlife biologist at the Animal Welfare Institute, said. “The breadth of these sanctions sends a strong message to Mexico that its utter failure to protect the vaquita will not be rewarded with access to U.S. markets.”

Mexico has failed to enforce a ban in instituted in 2017 on most gillnet fishing in the northern Gulf of California. the Mexican government in 2017 officially banned most —but not all — gillnet fishing in the vaquita’s habitat. In October 2019, the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society documented the presence of approximately 70 fishing boats fishing illegally in vaquita habitat in a single day in October 2019.

International organizations have taken steps to enforce international law to protect the vaquita. In October 2020, a committee under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) will consider implementing trade sanctions against Mexico for its failure to stem illegal exports of gillnet-caught fish protected by CITES. And in June 2019, the World Heritage Committee voted to list the vaquita’s habitat – a designated World Heritage site – as “in-danger” due to the vaquita’s decline, according to the Center for Biological Diversity. As a result, Mexico must now adopt “corrective measures” under the World Heritage Convention or risk losing its World Heritage designation, the nonprofit said.

Photo courtesy of NOAA

Cliff White

Cliff White

Executive Editor