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Seal hunting or sealing is the killing and harvesting of seals by human communities for their meat, fur, and blubber. It has been practised since pre-historic times wherever seal populations are abundant. [citation needed] During the 18th and 19th centuries, it became a major industry, particularly in the North Atlantic, with ships and gangs of sealers takings tens of thousands of seals per voyage. Harp seals have been hunted for many years. Infant harp seals were prized in the fur trade for their whitecoats, but after being made a principal focus of anti-fur campaigns, hunting whitecoat infants was banned. Infant seals may still be killed legally once they moult, which begins at about 2 weeks of age. In many countries sealers have to land the seal meat, increasing the operational cost. Subsidising sealing has been considered in some countries in order to reduce the total predation caused by seals. Hunting is now controlled by quota regulations after international recommendations by ICES. The seals that are hunted must be independent, self-reliant animals. Hunting of harp seal pups (whitecoats) and hooded seals (bluebacks) is since 1987 prohibited. Quotas are normally given as number of 1+ individuals (one year and older), each 1+ animal equalling 2 pups. The Canadian management set a three-year quota, including provision for transfers between years, at the start of the three year period. The Advisory Committee on Fishery Management (ACFM), ICES, has given the following statement to assess and establish biological limits for harp and hooded seals:
Seal hunt in CanadaIn Canada, the season for the commercial hunt of harp and hooded seals is from November 15 to May 15. The majority of sealing occurs in late March off the Magdalen Islands (in Quebec), and about the second week of April off Newfoundland. This spring period is generally what is referred to as the 'Canadian Seal Hunt' [1], even though it is not only Canadians the actually hunt. The hunt is controversial, with opponents referring to it as animal cruelty and inhumane. Supporters claim it is an important part of the Newfoundland economy, providing a significant fraction of the yearly income of some 11,000-13,000 fishermen[2]. However with the seal hunting bringing in only $16.5 million or less per year, its represents a tiny fraction of Newfoundland's $15.5 billion GDP, and only benefits a small fraction of Newfoundland's 500,000 people[3]. The latest quotas granted by the Department of Fisheries and Oceans have recently been increased to 350,000 harp seals as well as 10,000 each of hooded and grey seals. The quotas are largely accepted as sustainable by independent researchers and the herds are stable at over five million harp seals in the North Atlantic alone. [citation needed] The sustainable nature of the hunt is the main reason the focus of the protests has shifted from an environmental concern to one of alleged cruelty. [citation needed] The harvesting of juvenile "white coats" has been banned since 1987. [4] This ban is widely believed to have been put through by the federal government out of public-relations concerns rather than out of any real threat to the seal population [citation needed], which experiences high infant mortality rates as a matter of course. [citation needed] Many animal-protection groups, such as International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW), and the WSPA (World Society for the Protection of Animals) encourage people to petition against the harvest. An interesting fact is that the World Wildlife Fund has not engaged in the seal hunt debate. They have noted that the current harp seal population has increased to approximately 5.8 million which is triple the population in the 1970's. [5] Seal hunt protests have recently been organized in a number of countries but attendance was small compared to the protest's heydey in the early 1980s. Despite the continued protests, demand continues to grow for seal pelts, as evidenced by record high prices obtained for seal pelts at auctions ($70 per pelt up from $15 in the mid-1990s) that are even higher now than before the campaigns of the 1980s. [6] Further evidence of the growing public acceptance of sealing is reflected in the recent use of seal pelts by high-end fashion designers such as Donatella Versace and Gucci as well as a number of high profile graduating students from major fashion schools. See also
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