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There were about 1,300 Cook Inlet belugas in the 1980s but numbers had declined to an estimated 653 in 1994. Numbers reached an all-time low of 278 in 2005. Alaska's other four beluga groups are not endangered and number thousands.
The Cook Inlet belugas were listed last year as endangered, a move that was opposed by the state over concerns about what a listing would do to the state's economy. Cook Inlet is an economic hub.
The federal listing requires the designation of critical habitat, a recovery plan and a review of activities in Cook Inlet.
Given the economic importance of Cook Inlet, Mahoney said the agency conducted an economic analysis, looking at such things as the expansion of the port, shipping, tourism, military installations, commercial fishing and oil and gas exploration.
Officials have said the listing does not mean that development in Cook Inlet will stop, only that it will have to undergo a more rigorous review.
[Associated
Press;
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