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Exploitation
Romero, A., R. Baker, J. E. Creswell, A.
Singh, A. McKie & M. Manna. 2002.
Environmental history of marine mammal exploitation in Trinidad and
Tobago, W.I. and its ecological impact. Environment and History
8(3):255-274.
Abstract
Marine mammal exploitation has been documented for the
Caribbean in recent times but only for a handful of countries. Based on
those studies a complex image of how that exploitation has taken place has
begun to emerge. In order to fully understand whaling, dolphin fisheries,
and manatee hunting, we still need to ascertain how that pattern of
exploitation has taken place for many of the island-nations in that part
of the world. We present a comprehensive analysis of marine mammal
utilisation for Trinidad and Tobago. Trinidad and Tobago has been
characterised by land-based whaling organized by local elites during most
of the nineteenth century. Dolphin fisheries have been rare and restricted
to by-catches. Trinidad has the last remaining population of manatees
among the eastern Caribbean islands and is composed of a small number of
individuals confined to a small swamp. We compared the history, patterns,
and results of this exploitation in Trinidad and Tobago with other
neighbouring nations (Venezuela, Grenada, and St. Vincent & The
Grenadines). As in other countries in the area that practised intense
whaling, local populations of humpback whales have become virtually
extinct in their waters. Culture, more than anything else, seems to be the
force shaping the nature of marine mammal exploitation in the Caribbean
which has resulted in different histories and methods of exploitation for
each one of the countries studied.
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Pictures of dolphins of the coasts of Trinidad

Hides of manatees being dried. Picture
taken in Trinidad ca. 1900. |