humpback whale calf in ocean

Volume 60  Issue 2

Spring 2011

Backlit and buoyant, a humpback whale calf glides through sun-dappled waters off the coast of Tonga. The young calf and his mother will stay here during the austral winter and spring months. Come summer, they’ll head for feeding grounds along the Antarctic coast. Slow swimmers who hug the shoreline, humpbacks proved easy targets for commercial whalers in the early 20th century and were hunted nearly to extinction. In 1966 the International Whaling Commission imposed a ban on commercial hunts of these whales, though they are still hunted by aboriginal communities. Two articles in this issue speak to the future of the oceans’ whales. The first offers one woman’s view on differing cultural perspectives regarding whales and dolphins. The other discusses the US government’s responsibility to impose trade sanctions on Iceland for whaling and trading whale products in defiance of international law.

Photo by Scott Portelli



More in this Issue

AWI Turns 60

All Programs

In Many States, Attempts Afoot to Undermine Animal Welfare

Companion Animals, Farmed Animals, Marine Wildlife, Terrestrial Wildlife

Kids & Animals: Drawings from the Hands and Hearts of Children & Youth

Companion Animals, Equines, Farmed Animals, Marine Wildlife, Terrestrial Wildlife

Mystery Dolphin Deaths

Marine Wildlife

The Downside of Cuteness

Terrestrial Wildlife

Trap Near Trail Spells Agony For Pet

Companion Animals, Terrestrial Wildlife

Reviews

bones of the tiger book cover

Bones of the Tiger

Terrestrial Wildlife