Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Sea lions rescued from fishing nets in Sonora

Five California sea lions were rescued from fishing nets in the Gulf of California off the coast of Sonora.

The liberation of the three pups under a year old and an adult male and adult female was the result of a campaign to disentangle the mammals from fishing nets on Isla San Jorge, off the coast of Sonora.

The campaign began with a theoretical training course led by the Marine Mammal Center (TMMC) in Sausalito, California, in coordination with various Mexican conservation organizations.

Conanp explained in a press release that the nets used in the Gulf of California use buoys and weights to keep them spread vertically in the water, some as long as 800 meters.

Once set, they move with the currents to capture various species, some of which have difficulty getting free. Sea lions are among the marine mammals that die in the nets.

The California sea lion is protected as an at-risk species under a 2010 environmental protection law.

The rescue was carried out by agents from the Natural Protected Areas Commission (Conanp) and the environmental protection agency Profepa in coordination with personnel from the Islas del Golfo de California protected area and the navy.

Source: Milenio (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Peso and dollar

Peso depreciates on fears of a prolonged war in the Middle East

0
After closing at 17.28 to the dollar on Monday, the peso weakened to around 17.80 to the greenback on Tuesday morning before recouping some losses.
artifical reef installation

Yucatán installs its first artificial reef off the coast of Río Lagartos

0
By installing artificial reefs, state authorities take the pressure off existing natural reefs and ensure a brighter environmental future for marine life, the fishing industry and tourism.
medations shelf

INEGI study: Access to housing, food and education improving, but inequality still plagues health care

0
The findings come from what's known as INEGI's Social Development Indicators System, which uses real-life metrics to help decision-makers develop social policy.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity