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Given that
the beluga whale population in Alaska’s largest city Anchorage decreased by approximately
50 percent in the 1990s and that the mammals have not managed to rebound yet,
the state’s federal government decided Friday to list the belugas as endangered
species.
The
protection measures that have been previously taken with regards to the beluga
whales include having stopped Alaska Natives hunters from killing the small
whales.
Nevertheless,
federal scientists have reported that the population had not recovered, which
prompted them to declare the belugas endangered.
The whales
are now protected under the Endangered Species Act, after the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) determined that the beluga whale
population had gone down from 653 in
1994 to 278 in
2005.
The whales can be found swimming off the coast of Anchorage,
in the Cook Inlet (a channel
flowing from the city to the Gulf of Alaska) region.
Still, the
government’s decision has come into much opposition from Sarah Palin’s
administration, the state governor, who is also the GOP’s vice-presidential nominee in
the 2008 U.S. elections, having expressed her disapproval of the listing,
stating that she feared the measure would interfere with coastal and
offshore oil and gas development, as well as with a project to expand the Port
of Anchorage.
Palin has challenged the decision to list the beluga whales
as endangered-as she has previously done in the same matter concerning polar
bears-by saying the measure was premature and unnecessary and that it would cause
much damage to the economy of the Cook Inlet area.
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