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Thursday, 10 May, 2001, 18:25 GMT 19:25 UK

Russian ship to rescue baby seals


Baby seal BBS
The Russian authorities are sending a ship to try to rescue some of the hundreds of thousands of baby seals starving to death in the country's remote White Sea.



The journey from Murmansk takes about a day and straight after arrival the rescue operation will begin
Spokesman for the rescue operation

A spokesman for the crew said the vessel, weighing 20,000 tonnes, would transfer the pups to the neighbouring Barents Sea, where they would have more food.

The seals are trapped on ice floes in the White Sea, after unusually strong winds stopped them drifting to their normal feeding grounds in the Barents Sea.

A Russian scientist warned on Tuesday that almost 200,000 baby seals were doomed because of freak weather.



Only the adult seals can get themselves out on their own
Russian emergency minister

It is not clear how many seals the ship can carry, or how many trips it will make. The Russian emergency ministry said it would definitely become involved in the rescue operation.

"Only the adult seals can get themselves out on their own. The pups, and there are approximately 200,000 of them, need help," the Russian Emergency Minister, Sergey Shoygu, said.

Strong winds

The seals, which swim south to the White Sea to breed, normally drift back north on ice floes to the richer feeding grounds of the Barents Sea.

Map showing Barents Sea and White Sea BBC
But this year, the area has been hit by strong north-easterly winds, halting the normal drift patterns.

Vladimir Potelov, of the Polar Institute of Fish and Oceanography, said it would be impossible to evacuate or feed all the cubs, but it might be possible to save some.

"It is possible to catch those which are searching for food on the shore, transport them to inland waterways and then let them out into the southern part of the Barents Sea," he said.

A similar disaster occurred in 1966, when up to 300,000 baby seals died - around 60% of the total number born that year.

An unusually harsh winter in Russia has already caused problems for other wildlife.

Endangered Siberian tigers in Russia's far east have been struggling to survive after plummeting temperatures wiped out large numbers of their usual prey, which include reindeer and wild boar.


Related to this story:
Stranded seals face slow death (08 May 01 | Europe) Russian 'ice expedition' to save seals (18 Apr 01 | Media reports) Loggers wreak havoc in Siberia (04 Nov 00 | Media reports) Marine diseases set to increase (02 Sep 99 | Sci/Tech) Poachers threaten caviar future (03 Oct 00 | Europe)


Internet links: Seal Conservation Society | Russia Conservation News |
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