When John Cabot arrived on the shores of Newfoundland in 1497, the ships crew reported cod fish were so abundant that sailors could scoop them up with buckets. Even years later, English skippers wrote about cod shoals so thick by the shore that we hardly have been able to row a boat through them.
Plentiful catches are now the stuff of history books. The Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) reports cod populations from the Arctic to the Bay of Fundy declining to perilously low levelsby 97 to 99 per cent since the 1960s.
The committee recommends to federal environment minister Jim Prentice that cod be listed as endangered on the legal list of species at risk.
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Cod was designated by COSEWIC as a special concern in April 1998 with some populations deemed threatened or endangered by May 2003. But at that time, the government rejected COSEWICs recommendation to list the cod as endangered because of socio-economic concerns.
(A note about the terminology: species considered special concern are those particularly sensitive to human activities or natural events but are not endangered; threatened are species likely to become endangered if limiting conditions are not reversed; endangered are species facing imminent extinction or extirpation, missing from the wild.)
But Dr. Hutchings believes there may be a silver lining to COSEWICs report if the federal government accepts it this time. Then a recovery strategy would have to be implemented by law, he says.
Its old news that cod are in trouble. Its been 18 years since the collapse of northern cod stocks, he says. The silver lining is if we get determined action by the federal government to make recovery targets, set timelines to achieve those targets and establish harvest control rules.
Cod is by no means the only species assessed to be rarer in the Atlantic region, in this the International Year of Biodiversity.
The , whose call was once common in meadowlands of Annapolis, Kings, Hants, Cumberland and Colchester counties in Nova Scotia, is now considered threatened, in part because of agricultural activity, habitat loss and pesticide exposure. The Tubercled Spike-rush, a type of rush that grows on peaty and sandy shorelines, is assessed as special concern, because of damage by all-terrain vehicles and cottage development. And, the majestic Monarch butterfly, with a range throughout Canada, is also deemed special concern, mainly because of logging development in its wintering grounds in central Mexico and California.
The committee, which met last month to assess 51 species at risk, has now assessed 602 wildlife species in various risk categories, including 262 endangered, 151 threatened, 166 special concern, 23 extirpated (no longer found in the Canadian wild), and 13 wildlife species extinct.
With Dr. Hutchings stepping down, Marty Leonard, also a AV整氈窒 professor, assumes the chair for a two-year term.
LINK: (COSEWIC)