For  Immediate Release, November 4, 2016 
            
          
             'Whale Protection Zone' Sought in San Juans to  Save Critically Endangered Puget Sound Orcas  
            Zone  Would Protect Against Noise, Disturbances From Boats 
            SEATTLE— Conservation groups  petitioned   the Obama administration today to create a 10-square-mile “whale protection  zone” near San Juan Island to protect endangered orcas from vessel noise and  disturbance that interferes with feeding. With the recent deaths of a mother  and young calf, the population of critically endangered Southern Resident  killer whales, which makes its home in Puget Sound and migrates along the West  Coast, has dipped to only 80 individuals.   
            With the population’s recovery  stalled, today’s petition asks the National Marine Fisheries Service to create  a protected zone in the Salish Sea’s Haro Strait, where vessel traffic would be  restricted in the whales’ core foraging area. The petition was filed by Orca  Relief Citizens’ Alliance, the Center for Biological Diversity and Project  Seawolf.   
            “The  petitioners have been concerned for many years about the noise and disturbance  experienced by the Southern Residents. Today we are taking a vital step to help  prevent extinction of this endangered population,” said Bruce Stedman, Orca  Relief’s executive director. “Our petition to the National Marine Fisheries  Service is simple: Set up a whale protection zone for these iconic killer  whales, and do it now.” 
            The Fisheries Service singled out  Southern Resident killer whales as one of eight species most at risk of  extinction in its “Species in the Spotlight: Survive to  Thrive” report to  Congress earlier this year. Yet agency officials have resisted calls from conserva tion groups and a petition signed by more than 100,000 people to quickly expand critical habitat  protections for this orca population from the 2,500 miles now designated around  Puget Sound to cover more of its full 9,000-mile habitat range along the West  Coast.  
            “These endangered orcas desperately  need more protection to prevent them from spiraling into extinction. That means  preventing noise disturbance in the core of their habitat and ensuring their  access to salmon,” said Miyoko Sakashita, oceans program director at the Center  for Biological Diversity. “This whale protection zone could jump-start their  recovery with concrete protections.” 
            The  Southern Resident population is threatened primarily by lack of food due to  declining chinook salmon runs; toxic pollution; noise; and disturbance. The whale  protection zone would quickly and inexpensively give these orcas more quiet for  hunting, communications and rest. Vessels would be prohibited from the  protection zone from April 1 to Sept. 30, and all vessels would be required to  adhere to a “no-wake” speed limit.   
Orca Relief Citizens’ Alliance (“Orca Relief”) is a non-profit  organization committed to
  conservation of killer whales (Orcinus  orca), with a primary focus on the southern
  resident killer whale (SRKW) population stock in the Pacific  Northwest. www.orcarelief.org. 
            The Center for Biological Diversity is  a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 1.1 million  members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species  and wild places. www.biologicaldiversity.org 
            SeaWolf is an all volunteer, NW marine wildlife advocacy and  education organization, focusing mainly on the Southern Resident Killer Whale population  and other coastal NW species. www.projectseawolf.org/Project_SeaWolf.html 
    
            
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