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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Shipping lanes set up to save whales

New passageways account for the marine mammals

A blue whale is surfaces near a cargo ship in the Santa Barbara Channel off the California coast in 2008. (Associated Press)
Jason Dearen Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO – Large vessels traveling to ports on the California coast will begin using new traffic lanes today that were developed to protect endangered whales from ship collisions.

The new lanes change the routes of ships using San Francisco Bay, the Santa Barbara Channel and the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach in an effort to steer ships clear of where whales congregate.

Migrating blue, fin and humpback whales are prone to ship strikes because they are lured to the California shoreline in years where krill are plentiful. All three whale species are endangered.

“Our goal is a balance between the safe passage of commercial vessels into our busy ports and protection of endangered whale populations in and adjacent to national marine sanctuaries,” William Douros of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration said in a statement.

An uptick in the number of fatal whale strikes spurred federal maritime officials to work with the shipping industry and environmentalists on a two-year study meant to find ways to reduce the whale deaths.

The new lanes, along with aerial studies and an on-ship whale sighting effort, are all new efforts meant to reduce whale casualties.

John Calambokidis, an Olympia-based scientist who has studied ship strikes off the West Coast for decades and who participated in the effort, said the lanes are a good first step, but not a panacea.

“This will be a significant improvement but it will only result in a modest reduction in ship strikes and there are a number of additional steps we need to take to make more progress on this,” Calambokidis said.

In addition to the new traffic lanes, researchers will begin a series of flights beginning July 1 over the Santa Barbara Channel that will help further map where ship and whale traffic overlap.

Shipping companies have also agreed to host a NOAA-approved scientist aboard some company ships to develop a vessel-based whale spotting program that would reduce strikes.

The Pacific Merchant Shipping Association, which worked on the changes, applauded the efforts.

Three lanes on the approach to San Francisco Bay will be extended past the Continental Shelf to limit interaction between whales and cargo ships within the Cordell Bank and Gulf of the Farallones national marine sanctuaries.

In the Santa Barbara Channel, where four blue whales died in vessel strikes in 2007, a southbound lane will be shifted a mile north. The new lane steers vessels away from feeding grounds used by blue and humpback whales. Other lanes will be narrowed.

The ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, which handle 40 percent of America’s import trade, will see similar changes.