One of the world’s most endangered marine animals is a pint-size porpoise known as the vaquita. It
exists only in the Gulf of California off Mexico. No one knows exactly
how many are now alive; by 2018 fewer than 19 were left, researchers
estimate. Unless the species’ decline can be slowed, vaquitas likely will become extinct before 2021, which raises the question: How did we let this happen?
A stocky creature about four and a half feet long, the vaquita is the
smallest of the cetaceans, a family that includes whales, dolphins, and
porpoises. Dark pigment edging vaquitas’ eyes gives them a bovine look; in Spanish, the animal’s name means “little cow.”
Shortly
after scientists discovered the species in 1950, they realized it was
in trouble. Vaquitas were regularly drowning in gill nets meant for
shrimp and totoabas,
a fish whose swim bladder is a delicacy in China. In 1975, after the
totoaba was declared endangered, Mexico outlawed fishing for it. But the
work is easier, more lucrative, and less risky than drug trafficking,
so totoaba fishing continues—as do the deaths of vaquitas as bycatch.
In
2005 Mexico’s government made part of the gulf a vaquita refuge. But
the population kept falling—from more than 200 individuals in 2008 to
fewer than 30 in 2016. Unable to protect vaquitas in the wild, the
government made an unprecedented attempt to protect them in captivity.
In 2017 an international team of scientists, veterinarians, and
conservationists gathered in Mexico to stage VaquitaCPR,
a multimillion-dollar project to transfer half of the remaining
vaquitas into protected sea pens until their safety in the wild could be
assured. The team captured two females—but when both began showing
signs of stress, they were released. One of them didn’t survive, and
VaquitaCPR was discontinued.
© VaquitaCPR This young female vaquita, known as V01F, was captured during the VaquitaCPR mission, an emergency effort to place some of the endangered cetaceans in protected seapens. |
Wildlife biologist Matthew Podolsky contends that “even if that
vaquita hadn’t died and the capture effort had been successful, the root
of the problem would still remain”: Impoverished poachers, greedy
cartels, and corrupt officials would still care more about catching
totoabas than protecting vaquitas. Podolsky co-directed Sea of Shadows, a National Geographic documentary about activists’ and undercover investigators’ work to help save the species.
© VaquitaCPR V01F appeared to be so stressed by the experience that the conservationists decided to release her back into the wild. |
In this fight against extinction, Podolsky sees a cautionary tale
about the importance of protecting rare animals “at the first sign of
trouble”—not when only a few of them remain.