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Post by Logan on Mar 7, 2017 4:46:58 GMT -6
Whales are dying in the Chesapeake Bay and the Navy is looking for answersVIRGINIA BEACH -- For the last three years, the U.S. Navy has quietly looked out for whales and other marine mammals along the coast. Technically, it’s a requirement. To get permits to train at sea, the Navy needs to monitor the effects of its ships on sea life. But while it could spend thousands of dollars on the task, it spends between $3.5 million and $4 million a year along the Atlantic coast and a couple more on the Pacific. “The requirements for monitoring are pretty generic. We could easily just go out a few times a month, take pictures and check the box for the requirement,” said Joel Bell, a Navy senior marine resources specialist. “The Navy takes this very seriously.” This year the Marine Species Monitoring Program has been especially important. Four juvenile male humpback whales have washed up dead on local shores, the most recent two weeks ago on an Eastern Shore beach. Read more: pilotonline.com/news/local/environment/whales-are-dying-in-the-chesapeake-bay-and-the-navy/article_9566f351-df06-52bc-a362-8792d2ae0daa.html
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