Northern Resident Orca in Upper Georgia Strait
Some members of the Northern Resident Orca have made their way into inland waters such as Nodales Channel, Discovery Passage, and the upper Georgia Strait area. Over the weekend, some of these Orca travelled further south in Malaspina Strait and passed Powell River. The population of the Northern Resident Orca is approximately 300 animals, but only a few pods have forayed into the mentioned areas while most of the other Northern Residents have remained presumably in upper Johnstone Strait and the surrounding areas. Resident Orca are different from Transient Orca. There are small and subtle differences in their size and markings on their bodies. It is their diet, however, that distinguishes them as Residents eat salmon while Transients prey on marine mammals, like seals and dolphins. Resident Orca also tend to remain in an area for extended periods of time while Transient Orca move around from one area to another from day to day and have more unpredictable travel patterns.
Some Transient Orca were observed by Mitlenatch Island last Tuesday and during the day, they travelled south passing Comox. A few other pods of Transients have appeared in Howe Sound and around Vancouver during the week. Humpback whales continue to remain in the upper Georgia Strait and lower Sutil Channel areas, while a few made their way to Powell River and Texada Island. Some sightings of Pacific White-Sided dolphins were reported and of interest is that on at least two occasions, dolphins were interacting with Northern Resident Orca. Included in our report are a few sightings of Dall’s porpoise and two Sea Otters.
There are still many near misses with boaters almost striking whales. Slow Down Please! And spread the word.
Keep your eyes open, report your sightings to us, and use caution on the water giving these animals plenty of room. Remember N.E.W.S. when you see a whale, meaning put your boat in NEUTRAL, ENJOY the view, WAIT till the whales are at a fair distance, and then SLOWLY leave the scene.
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In the future, Burns said, volunteer whale rescuers will be made to wear helmets if they find themselves on a DFO vessel, working to free a whale.
“We’ve implemented a number of improvements to our protocols to ensure that in each and every circumstance, human safety is taken into account as paramount, that responders have the appropriate equipment.”
The department will also unveil a national disentanglement program by March 31 that will ensure “human safety takes top priority and safety equipment is available.”…
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The suit by the Center for Biological Diversity, Turtle Island Restoration Network and Wishtoyo Foundation, a non-profit that represents Native American tribes, was settled Friday in federal district court in San Francisco.
The National Marine Fisheries Service agreed to designate critical habitat for the animals by mid-2019 and finalize those boundaries a year later.
The environmental groups say endangered species with protected critical habitat are twice as likely to show signs of recovery as those without it….
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Ontario tourist Dan Blackman saw a right whale as the Mariner Cruises Whale and Seabird Tours boat was getting near the North Point lighthouse early Thursday afternoon.
“There was a whale coming out the water … we witnessed personally, a North Atlantic right whale. It had no dorsal fin so it was quite recognizable.
“It came up a second time and then we saw the tail.”
Blackman, who has been on more than 30 whale-watching tours said those onboard recognized it as a right whale immediately.
Blackman said another whale-watching tour operator saw another right whale earlier in the day halfway down Long Island on the Digby Neck and reported the sightings to the Department of Fisheries and Oceans….
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The associate professor in the engineering department at the Dalhousie University Agricultural Campus is part of a team of researchers working to preserve the skeletal structure of a 63-foot female blue whale found dead off Nova Scotia’s south shore last year.
By composting and degreasing the bones belonging to the Earth’s largest animal in a way that doesn’t involve toxic or harmful environmental contaminants, the team is creating a material that can safely be used in agriculture.
It will also hopefully lead to broader applications, like the development of what Price calls "community packages" that could help coastal communities deal more expeditiously with the issue of large carcasses that wash ashore and are typically buried underground, usually at a high cost….
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TAZ Whale Watching out of Gustavus, Alaska.
Pleasant Island Reef, Alaska….
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The footage from Flinders Bay, Augusta today shows what we have experienced before but never as intense as the Mother brought her calf time and time again close into our vessel, even pushing herself and the calf slightly into our hull where the males could not go. For 40 minutes the Mother and calf kept very close to our vessel and as the intensity and focus diminished from the males until one left the area and the lone male then behaved himself enough to be welcomed as an escort….
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John Orr, who works for Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH), took the photograph from Chanonry Point, on the Moray Firth near Fortrose.
One of the adult dolphins is thought to have been the calf’s mother.
SNH photographer Lorne Gill said: “It’s never easy to capture leaping dolphins at Chanonry Point even on really good occasions when you may be lucky enough to see many of them leaping close by.
“They randomly appear with a sudden burst of energy from the deep, making it difficult to know where to look.
“John has done extremely well to capture not just one but a trio of leaping dolphins, including a rarely seen young calf, beautifully framed and looking straight at his camera.
“He should be delighted with his photograph as I know I am.”…
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