
Dall's Porpoise - The Largest Cetacean Hunt in the World
EIA is the only group working against The Dall's Porpoise Hunt. For more info visit
www.dallsporpoise.org
The Dall’s porpoise is a stocky black and white cetacean found throughout the
northern Pacific and adjacent seas. It is the target of the largest hunt of any
whale, dolphin or porpoise species in the world, and has been for more than a
quarter of a century.
Large scale hunting of Dall’s porpoises has taken place in Japanese waters for
around 50 years. The average annual kill was between 5-10,000 animals during the
1960-70’s, however this shot up to over 40,000 animals after the International
Whaling Commission (IWC) implemented its ban on commercial whaling. The ban
saved many whale species from certain extinction, but unwittingly resulted in a
new hunting threat to Dall’s porpoises when Japan’s whaling companies began to
use Dall’s porpoise meat to replace the minke whales they were no longer allowed
to hunt. Dall’s porpoises were also traded to the south of Japan where
over-hunting of striped dolphins had left a demand for dolphin-type meat.
Today around 15,000 Dall’s porpoises are killed each year in a hand harpoon hunt
that has been repeatedly described by the IWC’s Scientific Committee as “clearly
unsustainable”.
Since catch records began in the early 1960s, more than half a million Dall’s
porpoises have been deliberately killed in Japan’s coastal waters.