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Meet the Vermont scientist studying critically endangered North Atlantic right whales A Vermont-based scientist has spent decades researching one of the world's most critically endangered species. Philip Hamilton of Putney is a senior scientist at the Anderson Cabot Center for Ocean Life at the New England Aquarium, where he and his colleagues manage a catalog of images of North Atlantic right whales. Sightings and photographs contained in the North Atlantic Right Whale Catalog are important because they inform the science and management of the endangered species.
Meet the Vermont scientist studying critically endangered North Atlantic right whales A Vermont-based scientist has spent decades researching one of the world's most critically endangered species. Philip Hamilton of Putney is a senior scientist at the Anderson Cabot Center for Ocean Life at the New England Aquarium, where he and his colleagues manage a catalog of images of North Atlantic right whales. Sightings and photographs contained in the North Atlantic Right Whale Catalog are important because they inform the science and management of the endangered species. "I won't feel like they're out of the woods, as far as extinction, for a while," Hamilton said in an interview with NBC5 In Depth, in which he described the species as an "underdog." Hamilton discussed a range of challenges facing the species, from large vessel strikes, entanglements with active, lost, or discarded fishing gear, and warming in the Gulf of Maine, which is a key feeding habitat. "They had to change when and where they fed," Hamilton explained. "They had to find new places to find the plankton they feed on. And during that transition, they got killed at high levels. They also were finding it harder to find food, so their body condition wasn't as great and they weren't reproducing as much." Hamilton's appearance on NBC5 In Depth came as the Trump administration wants to revise some rules that have been in place to protect right whales. Under current federal policy, large vessels have to slow down at certain times of the year along the East Coast to reduce the chances of hitting a whale. However, under President Trump's push to deregulate federal agencies, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has proposed changing those speed rules to reduce what the administration calls "unnecessary regulatory and economic burdens." "NOAA encourages economic prosperity in our oceans, and advancements in technology are increasingly allowing maritime commerce to coexist with endangered species," Neil Jacobs, the NOAA administrator, said in March. "This action is an important step in implementing the president's vision of adopting modern technologies, supporting American industry, and promoting efficient and effective regulations." Hamilton said he is optimistic that new but pricey technology known as ropeless or on-demand fishing gear will grow in the future, especially in areas that are closed to fishing seasonally because of whale regulations. "Then it could open up areas that they currently can't fish in," Hamilton said. "Our hope is it could be a win for both humans and animals, which is the way the aquarium and I believe you have to do conservation. We're not in it to harm humans. We're trying to find, together, solutions that will work for both humans and the endangered species." #foryoupage #vermont #fyp #whales #nature

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