the sei whale makes its return off the coast of Patagonia

the sei whale makes its return off the coast of

Almost 100 years after deserting the Argentinian coasts due to hunting, the sei whale, the third largest species of whale in the world, has reappeared off the coast of Patagonia. A success in terms of conservation which can be explained in particular by the regulations on whaling.

1 min

With our correspondent in Buenos Aires, Théo Conscience

You have to go back to 1929 to find the last time the immense gray-blue silhouette of a sei whale was seen off the coast of Argentina. In the 1920s, indiscriminate hunting had pushed these whales to exile to other latitudes to survive.

Ninety-five years later, scientists from the National University of Patagonia were able to observe from the Argentinian coast a specimen of this giant mammal that could measure up to 20 meters long and weigh an average of between 20 and 30 tons. .

This great comeback was made possible by the long and laborious implementation of regulations on whaling. After the signing of a first convention by 22 countries in 1931, an international moratorium came into force in 1986. The sei whale is today a protected species, whose total population is estimated between 10,000 and 50,000 individuals.

But threats remain around the world. On Thursday, Japan’s national fisheries agency proposed a plan to add the sei whale to the three whale species allowed for commercial whaling in the archipelago’s Exclusive Economic Zone.

To rereadHumpback whales once again threatened by ocean warming

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