<h2><SPAN name="THREATENED_EXTERMINATION_OF_THE_FUR_SEAL" id="THREATENED_EXTERMINATION_OF_THE_FUR_SEAL"></SPAN> THREATENED EXTERMINATION OF THE FUR SEAL.</h2>
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<p class="drop-cap">THE fur-seal herds of the north
Pacific breed on islands situated
in Bering Sea and belonging to
the United States and Russia.
On these islands, Pribilof and Komandorski,
for nearly a hundred years
they have received all necessary protection
from attacks on land. The existence
of the herds, however, demands
the further protection of the females
when they are feeding or migrating in
the open sea beyond the usual three-mile
limit of territorial jurisdiction.
The animals visit certain islands in the
summer. They breed on them and
make them their home. The young
remain there until driven away by the
storms of winter. The adults leave the
islands in summer only to feed, going
to a distance of one hundred to two
hundred miles for that purpose. The
winter is spent by the entire herd in
the open sea, their migrations extending
from one thousand to twenty-five
hundred miles to the southward of
their breeding-resorts.</p>
<p>For many years, both under Russian
and American control, the herds have,
as I have said, received absolute protection
on land, the killing for skins
being restricted to the bands of superfluous
males. As only one male in
about thirty is able to maintain himself
on a rookery or to rear a family, about
twenty-nine out of every thirty are
necessarily superfluous. The survival
of one male in a hundred is sufficient
for all actual needs of propagation.
The young males on land are as easily
handled and selected as sheep, and no
diminution whatever to the increase of
the herd has arisen from selective land-killing.
The number of females in the
herd bearing young each year was, in
the earlier days, about 650,000 on the
American islands and perhaps half as
many on the Russian. The numbers of
males and of young were together
about twice as many more. This gave
an annual total on the American, or
Pribilof, islands of about 2,000,000 animals
of all classes, while on the Russian,
or Komandorski, islands there
were about 1,000,000.</p>
<p>About 1884 different persons, known
as pelagic sealers—chiefly citizens of
Canada, but some of them from the
United States—began to attack the
herd in Bering Sea. Here no selective
killing was possible. The females were
always in the numerical majority, as
the males had become less numerous
on account of land-killing and as they
left the islands less frequently in the
summer. Each female above two years,
when taken in the sea, died with her
unborn young. Most of the adult females
so taken after July 1 had left
their young on the islands, and these
orphan pups invariably starved to
death.</p>
<p>Beginning with this increase of pelagic
sealing in 1884 the fur-seal herds
rapidly declined in numbers. In 1897
there were about 130,000 breeding-seals
on the American islands, or about 400,000
animals of all classes, while on the
Russian islands there were less than
65,000 breeding-animals, or less than
200,000 of all classes.</p>
<p>For this great reduction in numbers
there is but one cause—a cause plain,
self-evident, and undeniable—and that
is the slaughter of breeding-females at
a rate largely in excess of the rate of
increase. While other causes have been
assigned, none of them is worthy of the
slightest consideration in explaining
the decline.</p>
<p>Even in 1893 it was evident, to all
capable of forming an opinion, that
pelagic sealing was the sole known
cause of the decline of the fur-seal
herds. It was also evident that as an
industry it must be self-destructive,
since, if permitted to exist on any
scale which would make it profitable,
it must destroy the herd on which it
operated.—<i>"Lessons of the Paris Tribunal
of Arbitration," by President David Starr
Jordan, in Forum.</i></p>
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