The widow of TV “Crocodile Hunter” Steve Irwin is to launch non-lethal research of whales in Antarctic waters next year, in a bid to shame Japan’s scientific whale kill.
Tokyo has staunchly defended its annual cull of more than 1,000 whales as crucial for research, saying it is necessary to kill them to properly gather information about their eating, breeding and migratory habits.
But environmentalists and anti-whaling nations say the slaughter is commercial whaling in disguise, because much of the meat ends up being sold commercially.
Terri Irwin said that a whale watching programme she started to honour her late husband would expand into scientific research in 2008.
Steve Irwin, the high-profile wildlife show host and environmental campaigner, was killed by a stingray last year off Australia’s Great Barrier Reef.
“We are working with Oregon State University to do formalised research in the southern hemisphere,” Mrs Irwin said.
“We can actually learn everything the Japanese are learning with lethal research by using non-lethal research.”
Japan’s whaling fleet is run by a government-backed research institute and operates under a clause in International Whaling Commission rules that allows whales to be killed for scientific purposes.
Japan had planned to kill up to 50 endangered humpback whales this season, but backed away from the plan in the face of strong international condemnation.
“We are determined to show the Japanese they can stop all whaling, not just humpbacks,” Mrs Irwin said.
Earlier this month, Mrs Irwin threw her support behind a radical conservation group that has vowed to disrupt Japan’s annual whale hunt, allowing the US-based Sea Shepherd Conservation Society to rename one of its flagship vessels after her late husband.
Sea Shepherd has come under heavy criticism in recent years for engaging in violent tussles with the Japanese whaling fleet in Antarctic waters.