KARACHI: Forty-seven sightings of baleen whales, including 12 sightings of highly endangered Arabian Sea humpback whales, were reported off Pakistan’s coast last year through a fishing crew observer programme, says a World Wide Fund for Nature-Pakistan (WWF-P) report.
Titled ‘Arabian humpback and baleen whale sightings along the Pakistan coast: information generated through WWF Pakistan’s fishing crew observer programme’, the report has recently been presented in a meeting of the International Whaling Commission.
The observer programme, initiated over five years ago with two observers, now boasts of 75 participating vessels; this has increased the monitoring coverage of tuna fishing fleet and provides more platforms of opportunity for cetacean observations.
Under the programme, fishermen have been trained in species’ identification and in the safe release of all living megafauna (turtles, whale sharks, sunfish, mobulids, pelagic rays, birds, snakes and cetaceans).
According to the report, Pakistan has a large tuna gillnet fleet consisting of more than 500 wooden vessels which operate in coastal (territorial waters) and offshore waters (exclusive economic zone) as well as some venturing in the Area Beyond National Jurisdiction.
In 2012, WWF-P started an observer programme on these vessels in order to collect information about cetacean mortality in the tuna gillnet fisheries of Pakistan.
At the start of the programme, there were very few whale sightings with none in 2012 and only a handful in 2013 and 2014. But, with increase in observer coverage, training and experience, reports of whale sightings have increased significantly.
In November and December 2015, sightings of baleen whales increased to 14 but most could not be identified to species level, except one Bryde’s whale, which was recorded off Malan. In 2016, the number of observers further increased and a total of 47 sightings of baleen whales were recorded.