Iceland To End Whale Hunting in 2024

Feb 9, 2022

The Value of Whales

Whaling’s on its way out in Iceland. The tradition dates to the 12th century, when fishermen hunted extra-juicewhales off the shores of the island nation. It plans to end whaling in 2024 as demand for Iceland’s whale meat declines. That will leave Norway and Japan as the only countries where whaling will remain legal.      

Iceland's Fisheries Minister wrote in a newspaper column that there’s not enough proof of the economic benefits for Iceland to continue hunting whales.  

Commercial whale hunters have roamed the world’s seas since the 17th century. But a sharp decline in whales put many species on endangered lists. That led international groups to press countries to end the practice in the 1930s.   

Humans have killed tens of millions of whales. Experts believe whale populations have declined by 66% to 90% over time. 

Meanwhile, a study found that whale hunting adds to climate change. When whales die naturally, they sink to the bottom of the ocean. Experts estimate whales take 190,000 to 1.9 million tons of carbon down with them every year. But when the whale’s body is killed and processed by humans, that carbon is released into the atmosphere. Carbon emissions warm the planet.   

Also, whale poop plays a key role in carbon capture. It feeds the microscopic plant life in the oceans called phytoplankton. These tiny plants capture an estimated 40% of all carbon emissions produced. That's four times the amount captured by the Amazon rainforest.      

Question
Which of the following details is in the infographic, but not the article? (Common Core RI.5.7; RI.6.7)
a. Phytoplankton capture four times the amount of carbon as the Amazon Rainforest.
b. Norway, Japan, and Iceland are the only countries that hunt whales legally.
c. When whales die and sink to the bottom of the ocean, they sequester large amounts of carbon.
d. The whale watching industry is worth $2 billion.
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