Amazon.com Review
More than a century ago, the whaler Charles Melville Scammon chased pods of gray whales across the Pacific, slaughtering them by the hundreds and driving them nearly to the point of extinction. Dick Russell, a noted conservationist and journalist, follows Scammon's wake, bringing news both good and bad about the condition of the gray whale today.
Chronicling a journey along Pacific gray whale routes from Sakhalin Island to the southern tip of Baja California, Russell braces his narrative with the long, politically charged tale of a Japanese corporation's efforts to build a salt-extraction plant on a Mexican lagoon that has served for ages as an important gray whale breeding ground. Writing knowingly of gray whale natural history, and of the effects such an alteration of the environment would have on the species, Russell then turns to other controversial threats to the gray, such as the Washington Makah tribe's decision in the late 1990s to revive a lost tradition of whale-hunting, and the Japanese government's refusal to honor international treaties protecting the gray and other whale species from widespread depredation.
The good news, as Russell writes, is that the Mexican salt plant was eventually stopped. The bad news is that the gray whale is still everywhere under siege. Though it does not displace recent books such as Serge Dedina's Saving the Gray Whale and Robert Sullivan's A Whale Hunt, Russell's is by far the most complete popular account of the gray whale across its wide range, and it makes useful reading for anyone seeking to learn more about this key marine species. --Gregory McNamee
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Publishers Weekly
Thrilling whale watchers, stumping scientists and reminding environmentalists of the fragility of our ecological balance, the mysterious, massive gray whale takes an epic and emotional place in our hearts and minds. Here Russell (The Man Who Knew Too Much), an environmental journalist best known for sparking a movement to save the Atlantic striped bass, makes a passionate argument for the protection of California grays, dubbed "whales of passage" by the 19th-century whaler and naturalist Charles Melville Scammon. Juxtaposing his tale of the history and migration of the grays with Scammon's writings about them, Russell follows the whales' yearly 5000-mile swim from the warm lagoons in Baja where they give birth and exhibit "friendly" behavior toward humans up the Pacific coast of North America to the shallow and comparably chilly feeding grounds of Chirikof Basin in the Bering Sea. Along the way, he tells the harrowing tale of the gray's near extinction due to commercial whaling and the many real threats to the species from predators and human commercial development, while also gleefully detailing the work of marine biologists and environmentalists. For journalistic balance, Russell grudgingly gives some space to those he finds threatening to the grays; for example, he tepidly interviews members of the Makah tribe who hunted and killed a gray in 1999 and those involved in Mitsubishi's salt farming interests. However, their perspectives are quickly swallowed up by his disdain for their conflicts of interest and his articulate expression of the imperative to protect the gray whale specifically and marine life in general. (Aug.) Forecast: Our fascinating friends of the deep have many fans. If the popularity of Robert Sullivan's more personal account of the Makahs' assertion of their whaling rights in last year's A Whale Hunt is any indication, this will find an eager readership, though some may be daunted by its massive proportions.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
See all Editorial Reviews