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Nobody is killing those adorable white baby seals Every year, anti-seal hunt literature is almost guaranteed to include images of white-coated infant harp seals. This is despite the fact that Canada has banned the killing of white-coated seals since 1987, and that the Inuit never killed white coats.
But law prohibits hunters from killing pups that have yet to grow out of their white coat, like this baby's. Harp seals aren't endangered, but melting ice because of climate change is killing pups. A female seal swims beneath sea ice. Seal pups nurse for nearly two weeks before they must fend for themselves.
Why do hunters club seals? It's safe and easy, and it preserves the seal's valuable pelt. By law, you have to keep clubbing the seal in the forehead until you know for sure that it's dead. Sealers are supposed to palpate a pup's skull after they've clubbed it, to feel the caved-in bone beneath the skin and blubber.
Harp seals form the majority of the Atlantic hunt, and in 2012, the Canadian government estimated there were 7.7 million of them on the Atlantic coast. But they've now rebounded so successfully that their populations are almost as large as they were when much of Canada was still New France.
But law prohibits hunters from killing pups that have yet to grow out of their white coat, like this baby's. Harp seals aren't endangered, but melting ice because of climate change is killing pups. A female seal swims beneath sea ice. Adults are killed for their meat and oil, sold as a health supplement.
Seals are a sustainable resource and are in abundance. Speaking of sustainability, seals are part of the reason why fish stocks are very low (although overfishing is also a big issue) and the seal hunt not only provides jobs and resources for the hunters, but also allows the fish populations to regenerate (a bit.)
Thanks to exposes by animal advocates, it's now illegal to kill seals called “white coats” -- ones that are less than two weeks old. Hunters value the young seals because their fur is the softest -- but this prevents seals from breeding and sustaining the population.
Hunters in Canada target harp seal pups because of their soft fur. But law prohibits hunters from killing pups that have yet to grow out of their white coat, like this baby's. Harp seals aren't endangered, but melting ice because of climate change is killing pups. A female seal swims beneath sea ice.
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