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HELCOM Seal management in the Baltic
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HELCOM Contracting parties: Denmark EC Estonia Finland Germany Latvia Lithuania Poland Russia Sweden
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HELCOM seal recommendations 1970: Seals severly depleted 1988: Rec 9/1: No hunting of seals 1990: Seals increase, damages on fishing 2001: Nuisance seal licenses in Sweden 2003: Sweden lead country 2005: Workshop HELCOM/ICES/EU 2006: Rec 27-28/2
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HELCOM rec. on seals A framework for seal management in the Baltic Adopted 2006 www.helcom.fi/Recommendations/en_GB/ rec27-28_2/
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HELCOM recommendation 27-28/2 on seals in the Baltic The three seal species are important, unique and valuable components of the Baltic Sea ecosystem, their continued survival and well-being are inextricably linked to, and dependent on the quality of the Baltic Sea environment;
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HELCOM rec. on seals The seals of the Baltic Sea are important elements of the Common Natural Heritage of the Baltic Sea Region The continued existence and prosperity of the seal populations, --- are shared responsibilities of the Contracting Parties to the Helsinki Convention
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General Management Principles populations size (with the long-term objective to allow seal populations to recover towards carrying capacity levels); distribution (with the long-term objective to allow breeding seals to expand to suitable breeding distribution in all regions of the Baltic); health status (with the long-term objective of attaining the health status that secures the continued existence of the populations);
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Specific Reference Levels - - - are defined as : Target Reference Level: the level where the growth rate starts to level off and the population asymptotically approach the current carrying capacity level (e.g. 0.8 K); Limit Reference Level (the Safe Biological Level): the Minimum Viable Population Size, which is to be defined for each of the management units; Precautionary Approach Level where the populations are at maximum productivity level;
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Management Units for Baltic Sea seal populations: 1) Harbour seals in the Kalmarsund region (Sweden); 2) Southwestern Baltic harbour seals (Denmark, Germany, Poland, Sweden); 3) Gulf of Bothnia ringed seals (Finland, Sweden); 4) Southwestern Archipelago Sea, Gulf of Finland and Gulf of Riga ringed seals (Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Russia); 5) Baltic Sea grey seals (all Countries);
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HELCOM rec. on seals 1: to apply the General Management Principles and Management Units as defined above, --- develop and implement National Management Plans
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HELCOM rec. on seals 2: to take effective measures --- –to prevent illegal killing, –to reduce incidental bycatches --- if possible to a level close to zero ;
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3: to establish a HELCOM seal expert group with the tasks: to develop and co-ordinate monitoring programmes --- and evaluate their results; to quantify the Population Reference Levels; to define and quantify similar reference levels with regard to seal distribution and health status;
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Seal teams Population team (Tero Härkönen, Sweden) Distribution team (Wolfgang Dinter, Germany) Health team (Madeleine Nyman, Finland)
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Seal group, forts to assist in harmonising National Management Plans; to draft HELCOM Guidelines for exemptions to the General Management Principles; to consider detailed annual Term of Reference for the meetings ---; to report to HELCOM HABITAT annually;
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HELCOM rec. on seals 4: to carry out respective monitoring programmes as indicated above; 5: to collaborate within the HELCOM seal expert group to identify and establish a network of protected areas --- (re. the EU Habitat Directive, Annex II)
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HELCOM rec. on seals 6: to develop and to apply where possible non-lethal mitigation measures for seals to reduce bycatch and damage to fishing gear, as well as to support and coordinate the development of efficient mitigation measures;
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Thank You for Your attention!
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