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Vessels scour gulf for lost fishing gear in attempt to protect right whales

THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP, Michael Dwyer

Over three days, federal fishery officers and the Canadian Coast Guard will comb the waters of the Gulf of St. Lawrence for lost fishing gear in an effort to protect the endangered North Atlantic right whale.

In an operation that got underway today, officers from Atlantic Canada and Quebec aboard five coast guard vessels will search areas of the gulf with the highest reported gear loss.

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READ MORE: Rescuers make slow progress on freeing entangled North Atlantic right whales

The vessels are supported by a coast guard helicopter and conservation and protection surveillance aircraft to help locate the so-called “ghost gear” floating on the surface.

The operation will take place during daylight hours through Saturday, with the retrieved gear unloaded at various locations at the end of each day.

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READ MORE: One of three North Atlantic right whales entangled off N.B. may be on its way to freedom

Reporting lost fishing gear has been a licence requirement for all fixed-gear fisheries in the Gulf of St. Lawrence since 2018.

North Atlantic right whales number only about 400 worldwide, and in the last few weeks six have died in Canadian waters.

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