The Prague Post - Albania pushes out boat to save world's rarest seal

EUR -
AED 4.309309
AFN 79.962898
ALL 96.92927
AMD 448.404099
ANG 2.100857
AOA 1076.006853
ARS 1681.115895
AUD 1.766928
AWG 2.112118
AZN 1.994744
BAM 1.955382
BBD 2.362795
BDT 142.769466
BGN 1.955382
BHD 0.442205
BIF 3501.051226
BMD 1.173399
BND 1.504978
BOB 8.106266
BRL 6.273461
BSD 1.173149
BTN 103.481868
BWP 15.627658
BYN 3.97355
BYR 22998.621256
BZD 2.359395
CAD 1.624395
CDF 3326.586335
CHF 0.934707
CLF 0.02845
CLP 1116.0913
CNY 8.360115
CNH 8.360521
COP 4566.223416
CRC 590.973608
CUC 1.173399
CUP 31.095075
CVE 110.241423
CZK 24.333952
DJF 208.905321
DKK 7.465405
DOP 74.374094
DZD 151.77154
EGP 56.346152
ERN 17.600986
ETB 168.443075
FJD 2.626883
FKP 0.865592
GBP 0.865675
GEL 3.1562
GGP 0.865592
GHS 14.311939
GIP 0.865592
GMD 83.897887
GNF 10174.823898
GTQ 8.994076
GYD 245.437508
HKD 9.129643
HNL 30.735427
HRK 7.533695
HTG 153.507169
HUF 390.700223
IDR 19253.014169
ILS 3.914418
IMP 0.865592
INR 103.584736
IQD 1536.871307
IRR 49370.764113
ISK 143.213362
JEP 0.865592
JMD 188.189752
JOD 0.831914
JPY 173.30518
KES 151.567584
KGS 102.61354
KHR 4701.994379
KMF 492.246151
KPW 1056.099352
KRW 1634.580223
KWD 0.358321
KYD 0.977691
KZT 634.35433
LAK 25437.559637
LBP 105055.531642
LKR 353.964297
LRD 208.235464
LSL 20.360445
LTL 3.464743
LVL 0.709777
LYD 6.334645
MAD 10.564641
MDL 19.485833
MGA 5198.888107
MKD 61.526841
MMK 2463.942768
MNT 4219.567315
MOP 9.404189
MRU 46.831984
MUR 53.366418
MVR 17.964724
MWK 2034.164951
MXN 21.606072
MYR 4.934156
MZN 74.991658
NAD 20.360445
NGN 1762.802941
NIO 43.170767
NOK 11.600076
NPR 165.570589
NZD 1.971903
OMR 0.449804
PAB 1.173149
PEN 4.088426
PGK 4.971937
PHP 67.08308
PKR 333.074665
PLN 4.253014
PYG 8383.207073
QAR 4.282584
RON 5.065622
RSD 117.114952
RUB 97.757424
RWF 1699.936432
SAR 4.402129
SBD 9.629944
SCR 16.688431
SDG 705.797684
SEK 10.943759
SGD 1.505823
SHP 0.922107
SLE 27.428195
SLL 24605.595546
SOS 670.456609
SRD 46.202612
STD 24286.991121
STN 24.494761
SVC 10.264805
SYP 15256.477336
SZL 20.34065
THB 37.208204
TJS 11.039339
TMT 4.118631
TND 3.41507
TOP 2.748215
TRY 48.510073
TTD 7.976294
TWD 35.55387
TZS 2885.982771
UAH 48.364356
UGX 4123.118184
USD 1.173399
UYU 46.98995
UZS 14602.876864
VES 186.254041
VND 30960.133767
VUV 139.551787
WST 3.224146
XAF 655.81674
XAG 0.027819
XAU 0.000322
XCD 3.171169
XCG 2.114348
XDR 0.815626
XOF 655.81674
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.087416
ZAR 20.392203
ZMK 10562.000901
ZMW 27.833047
ZWL 377.834013
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    77.27

    0%

  • GSK

    -0.6500

    40.83

    -1.59%

  • BCC

    -3.3300

    85.68

    -3.89%

  • BCE

    -0.1400

    24.16

    -0.58%

  • NGG

    0.5300

    71.6

    +0.74%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    24.4

    +0.04%

  • RIO

    -0.1000

    62.44

    -0.16%

  • SCS

    -0.1900

    16.81

    -1.13%

  • RELX

    0.1700

    46.5

    +0.37%

  • CMSC

    -0.0200

    24.36

    -0.08%

  • RYCEF

    0.1800

    15.37

    +1.17%

  • JRI

    0.1100

    14.23

    +0.77%

  • AZN

    -1.5400

    79.56

    -1.94%

  • BP

    -0.5800

    33.89

    -1.71%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    11.85

    -0.08%

  • BTI

    -0.7200

    56.59

    -1.27%

Albania pushes out boat to save world's rarest seal
Albania pushes out boat to save world's rarest seal / Photo: Adnan Beci - AFP

Albania pushes out boat to save world's rarest seal

A team of Albanian marine biologists scan the azure waters of the Ionian Sea for a sign of one of the rarest marine mammals in the world.

Text size:

Mediterranean monk seals were once abundant, but now there are only a few hundred left in small scattered groups off Albania, Greece and Turkey and in Mauritania, on Africa's Atlantic coast.

Yet there are glimmers of hope for their survival despite a dramatic decline caused by overfishing and the overdevelopment of their coastal habitat.

Numbers are beginning to slowly rebound thanks to the creation of protected marine areas in recent years, experts say.

The seals have gone from being "critically endangered" in 2015 on the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN)'s red list to now being simply endangered.

Even so, they are still extremely difficult to track. Having previously lounged around on beaches, the seals have now retreated to the safety of isolated sea caves.

In Albania, "scientists have spotted a handful of the species thanks to meticulous work to identify the caves and coves where these shy animals hide, especially to give birth," biodiversity expert Nexhip Hysolakoj told AFP.

They have spent the past five years placing cameras in caves and other secluded spots along southern Albania's Adriatic and Ionian coasts to better track the animals.

Hysolakoj, who works in the Karaburun-Sazan marine reserve, regularly sets out from the port of Vlora aboard a vessel named the "Foka", or "seal" in Albanian, to check memory cards in the cameras hidden along the coastline.

It's "a real challenge because in order to capture the right images, they must be positioned toward the inner beaches of these caves, where the seals come to rest," he said.

- Cameras and caves -

The latest monk seals discovered by the team were spotted in January when they captured images of what was probably a female and her pup. They photographed two others in 2020, and there has also been a smattering of other sightings by tourists -- each greeted like a small victory.

Researchers tracking the mammal mostly ply the marine national park created in 2010 along the shores of the Karaburun Peninsula and Sazan Island -- a sanctuary where commercial fishing is prohibited, and from which large boats are banned.

Locals say monk seals were once numerous on Albanian beaches even though they were rarely tracked or monitored by scientists, especially during the decades of hardline communist rule.

But even there their populations were mauled by hunting and overfishing -- with dynamite often even used -- while pollution, tourism and climate change have further eroded numbers.

The illegal hunting of the seals and the "destruction of habitats or other factors have forced it to completely change its biological behaviour," said Aleksander Trajce, of the Protection and Preservation of Natural Environment in Albania advocacy group.

- Good omen -

So cameras and regular field trips are some of the only ways of observing the species' health.

"Only regular monitoring allows us to identify the presence of the monk seal and to define the sites to be protected," French researchers Jordi Salmona and Philippe Gaubert from the University of Toulouse's Evolution and Biological Diversity Laboratory told AFP in an email exchange.

The waters off Albania have become increasingly emptied of fish over the years, fishermen say, which puts them and the seals in the same boat.

"Seals feed mainly on fish, squid and shellfish. Less fish means fewer opportunities for them," said Baci Dyrmishaj, a fisherman in Vlora.

So in a land where superstitions are legion, fishermen have invented a new one to try to protect the monk seals.

"The seals bring luck to those who see them," said Dyrmishaj. "But if you disturb or hunt them, you will have bad luck."

Y.Havel--TPP