It's not just the Japanese

VulcanSpirit
Richard & Alison Brunstrom
Tue 4 Feb 2014 09:04
Most people and governments in the West now regard Japanese whaling - in the news again this week - with a mixture of horrfied revulsion and anger. I agree. But it's worth remembering just how recent our conversion to the cause of the whale really is.
 
Whaling started in NZ waters in the 1790s, and in the heyday of whaling in 1840 there were 200(!) whaling ships here, 150 of them from the USA. Usable whales were rapidly rendered virtually extinct, with whalers transferring their attentions to new less suitable species, right up to the end of whaling. The slaughter continued well into the twentieth century - in fact it is probably only the widespread availability of the new petroleum based products that enabled any whales to reach the age of conservation. The International Whaling Commission was established in 1946 with NZ as a founder member. Only in 1986 was a total moratorium was placed on commercial whaling, with NZ support.
 
But NZ was whaling almost up to the end. Here is the whaling boat beached and abandoned at NZ's last whaling station, Whangaparapara on Great Barrier. Almost unbelievably this station only opened in 1956, but by 1962 whales were commercially extinct in NZ and it closed having killed several hundred entirely harmless whales. NZ's last whale killing took place a scant two years later at 4pm on the 21st of December 1964 in the Cook Strait.  
 
 
 
 
A disgraceful era had come to an end, and good riddance to it. But it was only yesterday in biological terms.