Nova Scotia

Ottawa says N.S. coast clear of right whales, greenlights start to lobster season

The fishing season in one of Nova Scotia's most lucrative lobster-harvesting areas is set to go ahead next week after authorities failed to spot any endangered right whales.

Fisheries officials warn they will suspend fishing season if right whales are spotted in area again

The endangered North Atlantic right whales have changed their migratory path and are increasingly getting entangled in fishing gear and hit by vessels as they move north in search for food. (Lisa Conger/Northeast Fisheries Science Center under NOAA Permit #17355)

The fishing season in one of Nova Scotia's most lucrative lobster-harvesting areas is set to go ahead next week after authorities failed to spot any endangered right whales.

Earlier this week, Fisheries Department officials suspended the lobster season — which was supposed to begin Monday — after right whales were detected off the southwest coast of Nova Scotia.

But department spokesperson Robin Jahn said in an email Thursday that a recent surveillance operation over the Roseway Basin failed to spot any whales, and therefore, she said, officials will greenlight the start to the lobster season.

The closure affected LFA 33 and 34, some of the largest lobster-fishing areas in Nova Scotia.

This map from the Department of Fisheries and Oceans shows the area in the Roseway Basin that was temporarily closed. (DFO)

Fisheries officials warned, however, that if right whales are spotted in the area once again, the department will suspend the fishing season.

The endangered North Atlantic right whales have changed their migratory path and are increasingly getting entangled in fishing gear and hit by vessels as they move north in search for food.

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