Cook Island Beluga Whales
A half-dozen conservation organizations today plan to file a petition under a little-known state law seeking to have Cook Inlet beluga whales Conservation groups filed a request to have the whales listed as a federal endangered species this spring. The National Marine Fisheries Service has until next spring to make a decision on that request, but representatives for the groups said they decided to seek a state designation under Alaska's Endangered Species law to add another layer Jack Sterne, an attorney for the environmental law firm Trustees for Alaska, said state Fish and Game Commissioner Frank Rue will have 30 days to either reject the petition or schedule hearings on the request. The federal process takes more time and is more cumbersome. A handful of animals and birds have been designated endangered under the state statute after making the federal list. Sterne said this may be the
" Concern about the whales caused a state judge to remove five tracts from an oil and gas lease sale in Cook Inlet last spring, and a channel dredging project near Anchorage was cleared only after the U. Army Corps of Engineers reached a monitoring agreement with environmental groups, including some of those who are now petitioning the state. Federal biologists are still analyzing population surveys taken last summer. Biologists say Cook Inlet belugas are a distinct population and their numbers have plummeted from an estimated 650 in 1994 to about 350 last summer. Southcentral business and industry groups opposed the request for a federal endangered species designation for the whales and may oppose the state request, too. anyone has petitioned the state to list a species that has not already been so designated by the federal government. Balliet said the part of Cook Inlet used by the whales is largely in state waters, which extend three miles out from the coast. "Overhunting did contribute to this animal's precipitous decline. But we have moved beyond the place of looking at what brought us here, and to look not only to their recovery but their ability to survive extinction. Freeman said he had not seen the petition. Increased harvest by Native hunters is believed to have caused the decline, but Kris Balliet, Alaska director of the Center for Marine Conservation, said other human activity in and around the Inlet may hamper the whales' ability to recover. "One thing we all agree about is we want to see the population recover," he said. Other petitioners include the Alaska Center for the Environment, Alaska Community Action on Toxics, Alaska Wildlife Alliance, the National Audubon Society and the Center for Biological Diversity.
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