Menu ☰

Its Now Illegal To Import Belugas from Sea of Okhotsk

| Mark J. Palmer
Topics: belugas, Dolphin and Whale Trade

NMFS Designates Russian Beluga Whales as Depleted

The Animal Welfare Institute (AWI), Cetacean Society International (CSI), Earth Island Institute (EII), and Whale and Dolphin Conservation (WDC) lauded the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) for its designation of the Sakhalin Bay-Amur River population of beluga whales in Russia as depleted under the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA).

Announced on October 27, the depleted designation now makes it illegal to import any belugas from this population into the United States for public display, including belugas captured from this stock that are already in captivity and their offspring. The rule marks the first time that the agency has exercised its authority under the MMPA to help protect a whale population inhabiting wholly foreign waters by designating it as depleted.

“This was the only right decision,” said Dr. Naomi Rose, AWI marine mammal scientist. “Although the belugas are in Russian waters, what we do here in the United States sets an example for authorities responsible for marine mammal protection everywhere. This final decision puts the United States solidly on the high ground in future collaborative efforts to provide additional protections for these beleaguered whales, which are still subject to capture for the display industry, especially in Russia and China.”

In early 2014, the groups submitted a petition to NMFS to designate this population of belugas as depleted after Georgia Aquarium, a U.S. facility, applied in 2012 for a permit to import 18 whales captured from the population. The science clearly showed that the population was well below 60 percent of its historic size, and therefore depleted under MMPA criteria. The groups supported NMFS’ decision to deny Georgia Aquarium’s import permit and intervened on behalf of the agency after it was subsequently sued by the aquarium.

Our coalition of groups intervened in the court case, and were successful in defending the NMFS decision against the import. While the September 2015 ruling by a federal court in Atlanta finally upheld the agency’s decision, the possibility remained that other facilities, or even Georgia Aquarium itself, could apply again for import permits. A depleted designation eliminates this possibility—even for belugas captured from this stock that are already in captivity and their offspring—thereby providing conservation benefits that may reduce the impacts of live captures to this stock.

The designation also provides a framework for U.S. agencies to promote stronger protections for the Sakhalin Bay-Amur River population of belugas. Russia has allowed captures from this population for the purpose of public display for many years. Many of the captured whales are used in Russia’s domestic facilities or are shipped to China and other destinations every year.

“This finding should send a clear message to captive facilities that the US is putting conservation before profit,” stated Regina Asmutis-Silvia, executive director of WDC North America. “We look forward to the day when all captive facilities follow suit and whales and dolphins are only found in the wild.”

“CSI is grateful to NMFS for providing this protection for these increasingly targeted belugas,” added William Rossiter, CSI executive director for advocacy, science and grants. “Russian capture quotas remain obscene despite the science backing NMFS's decision, but now none will come here. Everyone that buys a ticket to see a beluga in a tank should know that every capture is likely to leave behind injured and dead belugas. These belugas define what exploitation for entertainment is all about."

“NMFS is to be commended for making this decision to protect the beluga whales of Russia,” stated Mark J. Palmer, associate director of the International Marine Mammal Project of Earth Island Institute. “Too many aquariums now want live belugas, which do poorly in captivity and should not be consigned to a miserable life of eating dead fish in a small concrete tank.”

Click here to view the final rule in the Federal Register.

This video shows how brutal the beluga capture process is, beginning at 5:26. NOTE: Video is in Russian language.