North Pacific Sealing Convention
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hunting of sea otters
- In sea otter
Japan, and Russia signed the North Pacific Sealing Convention in 1911 to protect sea otters and northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus). Sea otters recovered modestly during the 20th century; however, their populations remain widely separated. Although the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources listed the sea otter…
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regulation of fur seal population
- In Bering Sea Dispute
…Canada, and Japan signed the North Pacific Sealing Convention, which further restricted the area of pelagic sealing but awarded Canada a percentage of all the revenue derived from the annual hunt. In 1941 Japan withdrew from the agreement, claiming that the seals were damaging its fisheries, and the United States…
Read More - In Pribilof Islands
…Japan, and Russia signed the North Pacific Sealing Convention, abolishing pelagic sealing north of latitude 30° N and providing that each country should share in the skins collected on the Pribilofs. The treaty was ended by Japan’s withdrawal in 1941 on its contention that the seals were despoiling Japanese fisheries.…
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