Humpback Whales Leaping Everywhere
Humpbacks have been having a great time popping out of the water non-stop. These shows don’t usually last too long, but we have been hearing that some have breached many times over providing opportunity to actually capture these bus sized animals fully out of the water. It’s an amazing sight.
Transient Bigg’s Orca have still been roaming the inner waters with the T002C family remaining in the Desolation Sound and Cortez Island areas. They have joined up with some other for brief visits, but mostly staying on their own.
Dall’s and Harbour Porpoise have once again been seen foraging together in Nodales Channel. They have been known to mate producing hydbrids. Usually the Mom is a Dall’s with the offspring frequently showing less black and white. A photo of one can be found on our Whales and Dolphins BC website under the species. The Pacific White Sided Dolphins have also been back and forth between Discovery Pass, some of the other inlets, and into Johnstone Strait. They continue to be wary of the Orca, I’m sure.
Keep your eyes open, report your sightings to us, and use caution on the water giving these animals plenty of room.
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Ford was able to confirm that it was indeed the third recorded sighting, including the two in 2013, of the rare species of whale that experts believed had been nearly extirpated.
"For those of us whose careers, whose life work has been working on whales off our Coast, we’d kind of given up hope that these animals would ever be seen again here," said John Ford, who has since retired, yet is still active in the research. "It’s very thrilling."
Although no exact number exists due to a lack of data and sightins, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans estimates fewer than 50 of these whales exist today….
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"It’s clear that we must take immediate action to help these whales by addressing the three main threats they are facing," Garneau said.
Those threats are food availability, noise and pollution.
On the B.C. coast, steps include a new requirement for marine vessels, including recreational boats, to keep at least 200 metres away from killer whales, fishery closures in areas where whales forage for food, limits on the total Chinook commercial fishery, and increased funding for research, monitoring and enforcement.
The government will also be working with BC Ferries to develop a noise-management plan and is asking marine vessels to slow down in the Haro Strait.
But it won’t be enough to help the declining whale population recover, said Misty MacDuffee of Raincoast Conservation.
Both MacDuffee and Wilhelmson said as a start they’d like to see the foraging areas closed to all boats, including commercial whale-watching boats not just fishing boats.
"You have to allow these animals to feed," Wilhelmson said.
At 75 members, the population is lower than it’s been in a few decades, she said. When the population fought to recover from its last dangerous dip, it had fewer environmental concerns to deal with. Back then, there was more food and less noise.
The situation is "urgent," she said. "We need adequate threat-reduction measures, and that’s what we’re not seeing."…
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The report spells out additional potential environmental, social and economic impacts of the controversial tar sands oil pipeline project, which the Canadian government recently committed to purchasing for CAD $4.5 billion in public funds….
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Article CBC News.
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Pickle, who is one of fewer than 200 orca now living in New Zealand waters, surfaced next to a sea safari on Friday as part of a 15-strong pod.
Nobody knows how the plucky ocean dweller ended up with a jagged half-fin, but a scientist who’s studied her since calf-hood said she hadn’t let it slow her down….
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I’ve been coming here for 18 years; it’s where I learned about whales. I’m inordinately fond of these animals and like me, they come back here too….
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Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, MA
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An analysis of isotopes in beluga bone and teeth showed belugas formerly fed on prey that had little contact with freshwater. More recent generations of belugas fed in areas where rivers pour freshwater into ocean habitats.
New information on Cook Inlet belugas is important because the species is endangered and its numbers have not increased despite hunting restrictions and other protections. Mark Nelson, a wildlife biologist for the Alaska Department of Fish and Game and the lead author of the study, called it a little piece of that puzzle….
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