1. | Beluga whales have been hunted for centuries. |
• | Since ancient times, indigenous Arctic peoples of Canada, Alaska, and Russia have hunted beluga whales for their meat, blubber, and skin. Tanned beluga skin, often referred to as "porpoise leather", is the only cetacean skin thick enough to be used as leather. | • | In the 18th and 19th centuries, commercial hunting of belugas by Europeans and Americans caused a decline in the Canadian Arctic beluga population. In addition to using the meat and blubber, Europeans also used the beluga whales' fine melon oil to lubricate watches and machinery, and to illuminate lighthouses. From 1868 to 1911, Scottish and American whalers took more than 20,000 belugas in Lancaster Sound and Davis Strait. | • | In the 1930s belugas along the St. Lawrence River were killed by fishermen, who believed the whales were a threat to the fishing industry. | • | Arctic natives still subsistence hunt belugas for food and other raw materials. This practice is an important part of their culture, but there is some concern that the current harvest may be too high for the population to withstand. The annual harvest is about 200 to 550 in Alaska and about 1,000 in Canada. | |
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