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Boris Worm, a fisheries professor at Dalhousie University in Canada who has warned of problems with tuna populations in the past, said the NOAA figures are within the yearly variations of mortality for tuna. "So it will be a bad year, but not a catastrophic year," Worm said. "This wouldn't push them over the brink." Former NOAA chief scientist Sylvia Earle, a renowned ocean explorer who has campaigned against overfishing of tuna, isn't convinced that bluefin tuna weathered the oil slick. "I think it's too early to celebrate a possible greater survival than had been predicted. These are, after all, models," Earle said. "The truth is we don't have enough information to be able to clearly say one way or another what happened to the 2010 class of baby tuna." Gulf scientists have wondered for months about the health of the bluefin tuna, said Larry McKinney, executive director of the Harte Research Institute for Gulf of Mexico Studies at Texas A&M University in Corpus Christi. "They are sentinel species that gives us an idea of the health of the open ocean, where we don't know a lot," McKinney said. ___ Online: NOAA's status of the bluefin tuna: NOAA's Southeast Fisheries Science Center: Gulf summit: http://www.sgmsummit.org/ Harte Research Institute for the Gulf of Mexico Studies:
http://www.harteresearchinstitute.org/
http://tinyurl.com/bmwoauf
http://www.sefsc.noaa.gov/
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