
Every year in March, vast herds of the northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) swim past Vancouver Island, enroute to their summer breeding grounds in Alaska. For centuries, the Nuu-cha-nulth natives had hunted these animals for their thick pelts (far richer than the hairy coats of harbour seals), so when the Hudson’s Bay Company established Fort Victoria in 1843, the natives began offering the pelts for sale. The HBC men were intrigued: sea otter populations were already declining, and the company needed another source of fur. By the 1860s Victoria-based schooners were hunting fur seals along the coast, employing crews of natives armed with harpoons.

It was chaos. Foreign hunters clubbed thousands of seals on the islands (see the 1892 photo at top) and sailed away. The American government dispatched warships, claiming the entire Bering Sea as its exclusive territory, and it seized dozens of foreign sealing schooners and threw their crews in jail. But as more vessels arrived it became impossible to police the open water, and the killing escalated.


Under an agreement with the Americans, the hunters were required to use harpoons, but many used guns, and by 1897 they were killing so many seals that the price of skins plunged. The waste was terrible: for every three animals they shot, two sank before they could be harvested. By 1902, only 200,000 northern fur seals remained. Forced to the bargaining table, in 1911 the U.S., Canada, Russia and Japan negotiated the North Pacific Fur Seal Convention, outlawing the open-water hunt in exchange for a percentage of a controlled hunt on the Pribilofs. It was the first international treaty dealing with the conservation of a species.


After the commercial hunt ended in 1969, harbour seals began to rebound. Today they’re near their historic numbers in B.C. waters, of about 100,000 animals. Dr. Peter Olesiuk, a Fisheries and Oceans Canada biologist in Nanaimo, says only a few “nuisance” seals are killed these days, to keep them from interfering with fishing operations or endangered salmon runs. “Overall salmon’s a pretty small part of their diet, about four percent. But they’re opportunistic predators.”

Every March, activists in Victoria and around the world protest against the seal hunt in Newfoundland. The old-fashioned brutality of clubbing harp seals certainly makes for shocking television, but perhaps our outrage is misplaced. While there are more harp seals in Newfoundland than ever, the northern fur seal’s population has dropped from 1.7 million in the 1970s to 1.2 million today, and it may be relisted as a threatened species. It turns out the Alaska seals are being killed by stray fishing gear and plastic garbage. We may be kinder than our ancestors, but we’re just as lethal.
UPDATE (April 30, 2009): I recently wrote a review of the new biography of Alex MacLean for the Times Colonist – and in the process, came across a bunch of YouTube videos that help illustrate our seal-hunting history.
The northern fur seal doesn’t come ashore in Victoria, so readers might wonder what they look like. There’s a cute video of a pup at the Vancouver Aquarium posted here, but I also love this one, of adults swimming through a kelp forest. They’re far more elegant than the bullet-shaped harbour seals that hang around our shores:
Henry Wood Elliott was an American painter and conservationist who lobbied for the protection of the northern fur seal a century ago. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has posted this biography, with lots of scenes of the Alaska seal rookeries:
Part two of the bio is here, and part three here.
Finally, here’s a trailer for a 2008 version of Jack London’s The Sea Wolf, with Tim Roth as “Death” Larsen (i.e. Dan MacLean, the brother of Victoria sealing captain Alex MacLean), the sinister brother of “Wolf” Larsen:
Thank you for this historic insight. Arrived here via the edited story in the Victoria News. Both the edit and the original story very well constructed. JD
ReplyDeleteHeya Ross - thanks for this!
ReplyDeleteIf anyone is interested in joining us in Victoria to protest the killing of seals, the date for our 'Walk For Seals' is March 15th, noon, meeting in Centennial Square.
Email me (Dave @ FriendsofAnimals.org) for more info!