1,100 dolphins wash up dead, often mutilated, on French beaches in three months

Most of the dolphins are found mutilated

The mass deaths have alarmed animal welfare groups, who say proposals to help save the dolphins are not sufficient.

Industrial fishing has been blamed for a record 1,100 dolphins washing up on beaches in France so far this year - often in a mutilated state.
More of the dead mammals have been found in the first three months of 2019 than in the entirety of last year, which was already a record-breaker.
The mass deaths have alarmed animal welfare groups and prompted French ecology minister Francois De Rugy to launch a national plan.
Activists say fishermen often cut body parts off the suffocated dolphins after they are pulled up in their nets, in a bid to save their equipment.
The ecology minister, under pressure to act as President Emmanuel Macron continues to champion pro-environment policies, has pledged to bolster research into existing repellent devices in use off the Bay of Biscay - an industrial fishing hub in the Atlantic Ocean.

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