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WATER WORLD
At least 2,500 seals found dead on Russia's Caspian Sea coast
by AFP Staff Writers
Moscow (AFP) Dec 5, 2022

At least 2,500 endangered seals have been found dead along Russia's Caspian Sea coast, the local environment ministry said.

Investigators are still working to explain why the seals washed up on beaches in Dagestan, southern Russia.

Authorities are leaning towards suffocation from gas released from the seafloor as the "main" cause of death, said Svetlana Radionova, the head of the Russian agency for natural resources.

She said she expected the first results of the investigation -- which should determine if water pollution had an impact -- towards the end of the week.

In an interview on Russian television Rossiya-24, Radionova recalled a similar disaster that saw 2,000 dead seals wash up on the coast of Dagestan and Azerbaijan in 2020.

The Caspian Sea, the world's largest inland body of water, is bordered by five countries: Russia, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, Iran and Turkmenistan.

The seal population of the Caspian Sea has for decades suffered from over-hunting and the effects of industrial pollution.

Experts say there are now about 68,000 Caspian seals, down from more than one million in the early 20th century.

Pollution from the extraction of oil and gas there, along with declining water levels due to climate change, pose a threat to many species and put the future of the sea itself at risk.


Related Links
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics


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WATER WORLD
French fishing ban unites fishermen, biodiversity activists
Saint-Raphael, France (AFP) Dec 1, 2022
A local fishing ban off the southern French coast has won praise from environmentalists and fishermen alike, a rare example of biodiversity protection dovetailing with business interests. Almost two decades after the ban, Cap Roux, a coastal tip of the Esterel mountain range near the resort of Saint-Raphael on the Mediterranean coast, is a biodiversity haven. It stands in stark contrast to many other places on the Cote d'Azur where unbridled construction, overfishing and heavy shipping traffic ... read more

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