The Caribbean island of Dominica has announced it will establish the world’s first dedicated sperm whale reserve, protecting a roughly 800-square-kilometer stretch of ocean off its western coast where around 200 sperm whales live year-round. Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit confirmed the plan, saying commercial fishing and large ships will be banned from the area — a rare nursing and feeding ground for one of the ocean’s most intelligent mammals.
At a glance
- Sperm whale reserve: Dominica’s protected zone covers nearly 800 sq km off the island’s western coast — making it the first reserve in the world designed specifically for sperm whales.
- Fishing restrictions: Commercial fishing will be prohibited within the reserve, though sustainable artisanal fishing will still be permitted as long as it does not endanger the whale population.
- Ship corridors: Large vessels will be required to follow designated ocean corridors through the area, reducing noise and physical disturbance to the whales’ breeding and feeding behaviors.
Why this community of whales is so rare
Sperm whales have one of the widest distributions of any marine mammal on Earth, ranging from Arctic to Antarctic waters. But permanent, year-round communities are extraordinarily rare. The waters off Dominica’s western coast are among the very few places on the planet where these animals can be reliably found in every season.
The resident population — roughly 200 whales — includes calves, nursing mothers, and extended family groups. Scientists believe these social structures, which can span decades, are central to how sperm whales learn, communicate, and survive. Research published in Nature Ecology & Evolution has shown that sperm whale clans pass on distinct behavioral traditions across generations — a form of cultural transmission once thought to be uniquely human.
“Their ancestors likely inhabited Dominica before humans arrived,” Prime Minister Skerrit said. “We want to ensure these majestic and highly intelligent animals are safe from harm.”
What the reserve actually protects
The announcement establishes a legal framework that covers multiple threats at once. Commercial fishing vessels — whose gear can entangle and injure whales — will be excluded entirely. Large ships, whose propellers and noise are known to disrupt whale communication and navigation, must reroute through designated corridors.
Whale-watching tourism will continue, but under tighter controls. Visitor numbers will be capped, and swimmers entering the water near the whales will need to follow new regulations designed to minimize stress on the animals. The goal is to balance economic activity with genuine ecological protection — not simply draw a line on a map.
Artisanal fishing by local communities will still be allowed inside the reserve, provided it is practiced sustainably. That distinction matters. Many marine protected areas around the world have drawn criticism for shutting out small-scale, traditional fishers while doing little to stop industrial vessels. The International Union for Conservation of Nature has long advocated for protected area models that integrate community livelihoods rather than displace them.
Sperm whales and the climate
Skerrit’s statement included a phrase that deserves attention: he described the whales as “keeping our waters and our climate healthy.” That’s not just rhetoric.
Sperm whales are what marine biologists call a keystone species — their presence shapes entire ecosystems. Their deep dives and surface feeding cycles redistribute nutrients through the water column, supporting phytoplankton growth. Phytoplankton absorbs carbon dioxide. Studies have estimated that whale populations play a measurable role in oceanic carbon storage — meaning protecting whales is, in a very real sense, a climate strategy.
Dominica, a small island of roughly 73,000 people, sits in one of the regions most exposed to the effects of climate change. The country was devastated by Hurricane Maria in 2017 C.E. Framing whale protection as part of its own climate resilience is a signal that small nations can pursue sophisticated, nature-based solutions on their own terms.
Still work ahead
The reserve’s announcement is a genuine milestone, but the details of enforcement — how vessel compliance will be monitored, how artisanal fishing rules will be applied, and how tourist numbers will actually be managed — remain to be finalized. Translating a policy commitment into durable protection for an endangered species will require sustained resources and political will over years, not just months.
Still, the precedent itself has weight. No government had ever designated a marine area specifically to protect sperm whales before. The Dominica Sperm Whale Project, which has been studying this community of whales for years, has argued that the animals’ complex social lives make them especially vulnerable to disruption — and especially worthy of dedicated protection. Dominica has now made that case in law.
Read more
For more on this story, see: BBC News
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana establishes a new marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Renewables now make up at least 49% of global power capacity
- The Good News for Humankind archive on marine conservation
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