ACS logo
acsonline.org

American Cetacean Society - They're Not Saved Yet!
Education Issues Research Whale Watching About ACS How to Help
* Chapters
+ Channel Islands
+ Los Angeles
+ Monterey Bay
+ Puget Sound
+ Orange County
+ San Francisco
+ How to Start a New Chapter
* Contact Us
* History
* Supporters

Annual Report
+ Conservation
+ Education
+ Research
+ Advisors
+ Directors

Policies
+ Biopsy Darts
+ Bowhead Whale Policy
+ Boycotts
+ Dolphins, Feeding Programs
+ Dolphins, Swim-with Programs
+ Dolphins, Tuna Boycott
+ Fishing, Gill Nets
+ Fishing, Entanglement
+ Gray Whale Policy
+ Harp Seal Policy
+ Helium Balloons
+ Killer Whale Policy
+ Marine Biodiversity
+ National Marine Sanctuaries
+ Northern Right Whale
+ Oil Spill / ANWR Policy
+ Sound, LFA Sonar
+ Whaling, Commercial
+ Whaling, Moratorium
+ How to Procedure for Adoption of Public Policy

ACS Achievements in Conservation

---

ACS chapters also have conservation programs; most are focused on issues within their region.

NO WHALING
During the past 25 years, ACS has attended the majority of the annual meetings of the International Whaling Commission (IWC), in order to promote responsible decision-making within the organization that is empowered to determine if and how whaling shall be conducted. In collaboration with like-minded organizations such as the Humane Society of the United States, the International Wildlife Coalition, the Sierra Club, the International Fund for Animals, the Whale & Dolphin Conservation Society, and the World Wildlife Fund, ACS gives a face and a voice to the conservationist point of view and persuades others to prevent irreversible devastation to these magnificent natural resources whose survival is by no means guaranteed.

photo

SALT HALT
ACS gathered thousands of signatures on petitions, wrote letters to American, Japanese, and Mexican government officials, and joined a coalition of environmentalists to stop Mitsubishi and the Mexican government from building the world's largest salt evaporation plant in the gray whale calving lagoon of San Ignacio in Baja California, Mexico. This ended a 5-year battle between the forces of conservation and development, reinforced the integrity of this UNESCO World Heritage Site and Biosphere Reserve, and brightened the prospects for the future of the largest surviving population of gray whales (the North Atlantic population is already extinct).

NO HARMFUL SONAR
ACS is actively involved in the campaign to stop the Navy's attempt to deploy a powerful new sonar system called "LFA" (low frequency active sonar) which researchers predict will harm whole populations of marine life. When the National Marine Fisheries Service held public hearings, ACS attended, and the Navy's permit was delayed. In 2001, the Navy admitted that their sonar tests were indeed the cause of death for at least a dozen cetaceans that beached themselves in the Bahamas after suffering from extensive bleeding in the brain, eyes and ears - exactly the kind of irreparable acoustic damage researchers had anticipated.






ACS logo American Cetacean Society
protecting whales, dolphins, porpoises, & their habitats through education, conservation, & research since 1967
top of page
TOP

Home | Contact ACS | Education | Issues | Trips | Members-Only | Join ACS

ACS National H.Q.:   P.O. Box 1391,   San Pedro,   CA 90733 USA


Introduction by Sarah Allen. Sarah first became interested in humpbacks and their songs as an Earthwatch volunteer. She joined the ACS Whalewatch program in 1999 and has served as Los Angeles chapter delegate, a census project volunteer, conference silent auction coordinator, national development chair and grant writer.

  Site Map
to report bugs or technical concerns about site: www.ArtemisComputing.com
photo courtesy Bernardo Alps, copyright © 2003, all rights reserved
American Cetacean Society privacy policy
site © 1999-2008 ACS. All Rights Reserved.