Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Research finds sea otter comeback worth millions but not all benefit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Jun, 2020 07:45 PM
  • Research finds sea otter comeback worth millions but not all benefit

The return of playful, popular sea otters to the Pacific shores of British Columbia is adding nearly $50 million a year to the province's economy despite its impact on valuable fisheries, says a study.

University of British Columbia researchers say their conclusions may apply anywhere top predators have been returned to ecosystems from which they had been eliminated.

But they warn the benefits must be evenly shared.

"When people invest in restoring ecosystems, including top predators, it can have large, positive benefits for people," said Russ Markel, one of the authors of the paper published Thursday in the journal Science.

"(But) First Nations and coastal communities were not consulted when sea otters were reintroduced 50 years ago and many of the benefits are not reaching or remaining in them."

Sea otters were nearly wiped out along the B.C. coast by 19th-century fur traders. In the otters' absence, prey species such as clams, sea urchins and crabs thrived.

Those booms gave rise to lucrative fisheries that sustained small towns and First Nations along the coast for decades.

Between 1972 and 1979, 89 sea otters were reintroduced to their former habitat and protected under the Species At Risk Act. There are now thousands of them.

The scientists attempted to measure the environmental, economic and social impacts of the population increase and weigh them against each other in dollars.

"This study takes this complex tangle of predator-induced interactions and it places them in a social and economic context," said co-author Jane Watson.

With fewer urchins grazing on them, underwater kelp forests have grown twentyfold, providing new habitat for a range of fish from rockfish to salmon. Stocks of ling cod have tripled and the overall amount of life in the water has increased by 37 per cent, which has created new fisheries worth nearly $10 million.

More carbon has been stored, worth about $2 million at current carbon prices. Tourists have spent a total of about $42 million for the privilege of seeing the otters cavort.

But otters eat up to a quarter of their body weight every day, so various clam fisheries have lost about one-quarter of their value. Fewer crabs and sea urchins have been landed.

The paper estimates the total loss at just over $7 million. That leaves a net benefit of about $46 million, although the scientists acknowledge a wide margin of error.

Much of that net benefit has escaped local people, the paper says.

"Sea otter recovery is unpopular in many coastal communities."

Some of those communities have a cultural preference for their old catches of clams and crabs and miss the delicacy of a fresh urchin. Some are simply shut out from the new ecosystem.

Commercial fishing licences are concentrating in fewer and fewer hands, said co-author Kai Chan.

"It's a lack of access and declining access to boats and fish and licences," he said. "They're surrounded by abundant shellfish and fish resources, but in many cases they don't have the licences, the boats and the fuel to get out and access them."

The authors urge reorienting fisheries policy toward local benefits and food security. They suggest returning to some traditional practices such as clam gardens, which use rock walls at low-tide lines to increase the amount of productive shellfish habitat on a beach.

"It's hard to adapt," Watson said. "It will take a great deal of clever interactions between traditional management and understanding the ecology."

The sea otter experience emphasizes the importance of ensuring benefits of reintroducing top predators — such as the return of wolves to United States rangelands — are shared, the scientists say.

"The structure of (our) model is eminently transferable to any system," said co-author Ed Gregr.

"With the wolves, some of the local communities have seen the benefits associated with toursim and recreation. Meanwhile, the ranchers benefit much less.

"One of the things that has been helpful are programs that allow ranchers to benefit from compensation so that the costs associated with this top predator that brings such important benefits to the region are not being experienced acutely by ranchers."

MORE National ARTICLES

Stranded Canadians Struggle To Return Home—And Get Refunds For Cancelled Flights

Stranded Canadians Struggle To Return Home—And Get Refunds For Cancelled Flights
Canadians abroad are raising concerns about compensation as they try to find a way back home, with some stranded as borders close and airlines cut flights due to the novel coronavirus pandemic.    

Stranded Canadians Struggle To Return Home—And Get Refunds For Cancelled Flights

Domestic Violence Shelters Adapt As Covid-19 Forces Families Home

Domestic Violence Shelters Adapt As Covid-19 Forces Families Home
CALGARY - Women's shelters are adjusting to ensure they can help anyone experiencing domestic violence as the COVID-19 pandemic forces families to stay home together, worsens economic hardship and upsets routines.    

Domestic Violence Shelters Adapt As Covid-19 Forces Families Home

B.C. Declares State Of Emergency Over Covid-19 To Help Maintain Services

B.C. Declares State Of Emergency Over Covid-19 To Help Maintain Services
Farnworth said it will also allow for the delivery of federal, provincial and local resources in a co-ordinated way.

B.C. Declares State Of Emergency Over Covid-19 To Help Maintain Services

HSBC Bank Canada Drops Prime Lending Rate To 2.95 Per Cent, Matching Others

HSBC Bank Canada Drops Prime Lending Rate To 2.95 Per Cent, Matching Others
 HSBC Bank Canada says it will lower its prime lending rate by 50 basis points effective tomorrow.

HSBC Bank Canada Drops Prime Lending Rate To 2.95 Per Cent, Matching Others

Five Things To Know About Ottawa's COVID-19 Financial Aid Package

OTTAWA - Five things to know about Ottawa's $82-billion financial-aid package announced Wednesday to help weather the COVID-19 pandemic:

Five Things To Know About Ottawa's COVID-19 Financial Aid Package

Students At Several Colleges And Universities Asked To Vacate Dorms Over COVID-19

Students At Several Colleges And Universities Asked To Vacate Dorms Over COVID-19
Students at several post-secondary institutions are being asked or told to move out of their dorms in response to COVID-19.

Students At Several Colleges And Universities Asked To Vacate Dorms Over COVID-19