#extinction #dolphins #bycatch
"Groups File New Lawsuit to Prevent Extinction of Earth’s Rarest Marine Dolphins
Suit seeks U.S. ban on New Zealand seafood as fishing fleets harm rare Māui and Hector’s dolphins
Earthjustice and Law of the Wild filed a legal action on behalf of the grassroots group Māui and Hector’s Dolphin Defenders to protect the rarest marine dolphins in the world. The new legal claim asks the court to order seafood import protections to prevent extinction of New Zealand’s Māui dolphins and their close relatives, Hector’s dolphins.
Background on this case
This recent lawsuit follows on the heels of an action Earthjustice and Law of the Wild filed in December 2024 on behalf of Māui and Hector’s Dolphin Defenders to enforce the U.S Marine Mammal Protection Act, which requires the U.S. government to ban seafood imports from any foreign fishery that excessively harms marine mammals.
The 2024 suit contended that New Zealand fishing fleets are driving the critically endangered Māui dolphin to extinction, with estimates of only 30 to 50 left on Earth, and very few breeding females. Fifty years ago, there were 2,000 Maui dolphins. Since then, the population has plummeted by over 97 percent.
The closely related Hector’s dolphins are also dwindling – only about 15,000 Hector’s dolphins remain, down from a population of about 50,000 in 1975.
The fishing fleets operating along the West Coast of New Zealand’s North Island don’t intentionally catch Māui or Hector’s dolphins, but the marine mammals get caught when fishers target commercial seafood species. The fishers use large nets that hang in the water for days or drag through the sea, scooping up everything in their path. Even if the dolphins are freed from the nets and do not drown, they can suffer serious injuries while struggling to reach the surface to breathe.
In August 2025, after reviewing all the evidence, the Court of International Trade ruled that the U.S. government’s decision to allow seafood imports from two of New Zealand’s west coast fisheries was arbitrary and unlawful.
But the victory was short-lived. Just days later, the U.S. government issued another decision, allowing all seafood exports from New Zealand to the United States. This decision permits the U.S. market to support not just the fisheries impacting critically endangered Māui dolphins, but also equally problematic fisheries that catch Hector’s dolphins and other marine mammals. The U.S. government’s decision that New Zealand’s bycatch levels are 'sustainable' is based on the same flawed reasoning and evidence that the Court of International Trade had previously found severely deficient The new legal action filed last week challenges that decision."

The Delmoges (DELphinus MOuvements GEStion) scientific project has been completed and the final reports are now available. Launched in March 2022 for a period of three and a half years, this ambitious interdisciplinary project aimed to study, for the first time, the mechanisms behind the accidental capture of common dolphins in the Bay of Biscay and to propose solutions for reconciling fishing and the protection of common dolphins. The project generated a wealth of new knowledge, particularly on dolphin ecology and on measuring and mapping the risk of capture at different spatial and temporal scales.

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