Thankful for Marine Mammals!
The ocean is full of life that we often do not see from above the surface. Unlike most marine life, Cetaceans (whales, dolphins, and porpoises) surface to breathe and are observable. Those who are fortunate to see Cetaceans in the wild marvel at their size, acrobatics, and intelligence. Since we just passed our Thanksgiving Holiday, here are a few thankful thoughts regarding some of the common species found in the inland waters.
Let’s be thankful for Orca (all three types) here in B.C. who are apex predators that control the populations of their prey and ultimately, the food chains in our ocean ecosystems. Let’s be thankful for the abundance of Orca here in B.C., and let’s be thankful for the surface behaviours of Orca that make it delightful in watching them. Let’s be thankful for all scientists and parties working to preserve and save the Southern Resident Orca population.
Let’s be thankful for the many Humpback whales that have returned to B.C. waters, and for the opportunities that we can learn about them. Let’s be thankful for the intelligence of Humpback whales and the acrobatic maneuvers (breaches) that leave us in awe about the animal kingdom! Let’s be thankful for Pacific White-Sided dolphins for their active nature, fun behaviours, and potentially, large size pods numbering in the hundreds that also leave us in awe. Let’s be thankful for the porpoises, the smallest Cetaceans of which there are two species here in B.C. Finally, let’s be thankful for the slow return of Sea Otters along our coast – cute little animals!
I would also like to thank all individuals and groups who made sighting reports, with some reports containing pictures and videos that were wonderful. On behalf of the Wild Ocean Whale Society (WOWs), I would also like to thank those who continue to support the WOWs organization, whether with resources, time, talents, and other means.
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.
WORLD OF WHALES 2018: Two incredible days of multimedia whale and marine mammal presentations and workshops.
Friday, November 16, 2018 offers Two FREE presentation sessions and Saturday, November 17, 2018
is a full day of workshops including lunch. At the Evergreen Theater, Powell River, BC.
For details and workshops registration, please go to World of Whales.
We appreciate and thank you for your kind donations. Donations Page
Our Cetacean Web Camera YouTube Channel is live. We’re continueing to work on resolving transmission problems causing the intermittent bouncy images from the Beach Gardens Marina camera. Our second (backup) live stream mounted in Powell River appears when the Beach Gardens camera is down. We appreciate your patience.
Thank You to our Volunteers and Contributors!
Our team of online Volunteers continue to do a great job in making sure all your sightings reports are mapped and published regularly. Would you like to join us?
Review our current Volunteer Job Postings
Archive Explorer navigates 10,000+ Cetacean Sightings, images, videos and audio recordings.
*Recommended for desktop browsers and newer mobile devices
Archive Explorer dives into the Coastal Cetacean world. View Cetacean sighting locations, photos and videos:
- All species including Orca, Humpback, Grey Whale or Dalls Porpoise
- Follow the endangered Southern Residents Orca in the Salish Sea
- Search for encounters with T002C2 Tumbo
- Witness a close-up Orca encounter video in Port Alberni harbour
- Follow the T010s Transients as they hunt and travel the inside passage
- Track “KC”, the ever popular Humphack’s movements this past August
- Locate any of 12,000 named locations on the BC and WA State coast
- Print custom sighting reports and maps (Coming Soon)
Archive Explorer Help Page explains many advanced functions
Send your Comments and Questions to: Archive Explorer Feedback
Sightings Open Data includes all sightings data, photos and videos, in a table you can filter and download.
The puzzle for researchers is to determine how the whales’ behavior-their foraging, socializing, traveling, resting, and sleeping habits-changes from day to night.
Understanding the intricacies of whale behavior is difficult at the best of times, even more so when they slip below the ocean’s surface at night. "We hear them on the hydrophones at night," explains Sheila Thornton, a research scientist with Fisheries and Oceans Canada who is overseeing a study into the shadowy lives of killer whales. "They’re active in their vocalizing, but we want to take that one step further and see what they’re actually doing."
In August, four researchers took to the water in Telegraph Cove, off the northeast coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia, armed with the latest in whale-tracking technology. Their targets were the threatened northern resident killer whales, whose population is growing but still totals only an estimated 309…
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Image: BC Ferries
The Crown corporation will spend $2 billion on 22 new vessels, with the next round of new vessels to begin service in 2020. New ferry construction will prioritize noise reduction through improved propellers, quiet military design features, wake management and engine noise dampening.
A typical ferry operating at service speed generates sound at about 185 decibels, which dissipates slowly over long distance, according to B.C. Ferries noise mitigation plan.
"Killer whale call intensity ranges up to 140 dB," the plan states. "Ferry noise … can interfere or mask (southern resident killer whale) communications and fish finding vocalizations."
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Meanwhile, Washington State Ferries also announced last month that it would retire 13 ferries and build 16 new ferries with quiet electric-hybrid engines at a cost of $7 billion over about 22 years….
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The chinook are themselves in deep crisis. The Columbia River chinook are listed as endangered in the U.S., and last week Fisheries and Oceans Canada released data showing this season’s chinook returns in the Fraser River were well below the historical average.
The southern residents, too, are listed as endangered under the Species at Risk Act. The next status after endangered is "extirpated," meaning they are reproductively non-viable, or dead. Ottawa is taking public input on the Species at Risk Act recovery strategy for northern and southern resident killer whales until Nov. 3.
Earlier this year the litigating groups asked Ottawa to curtail sport fishing and whale watching in critical feeding areas. The government responded by reducing the chinook catch by 25 to 35 per cent and increasing the buffer zone for whale watching to 200 metres.
Parts of the most important foraging areas in the Gulf Islands and the Strait of Juan de Fuca were closed to all fishing and partial closures were implemented at the mouth of the Fraser River.
"Since the death of three whales, including J50, we have upped our ask," said Misty MacDuffee, a biologist for Raincoast. "Now we want the closure of all marine-based commercial and sport chinook fisheries."
The groups are also calling for a full ban on whale watching for the southern residents….
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The collaboration announced Thursday involves scientists with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Northwest Fisheries Science Center, the nonprofit Nature Conservancy and BGI, a global genomics company.
The project will sequence the genome-the entire genetic code of a living thing-of more than 100 southern resident killer whales using skin or other samples collected from live and dead orcas over the past two decades. Initial results are expected next year.
Scientists said the information could help explain, for example, whether internal factors such as inbreeding or genetic variation in immune systems are preventing the whales from rebounding….
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You can encourage government to make bold strides in protecting killer whales, but they need to hear from you now. In your submission, tell officials to:
– Expand critical habitat to include the marine environment of the Gulf Islands in the Strait of Georgia
– Establish protected feeding refuges for southern resident orcas, with restrictions on commercial and recreational fishing for Chinook salmon
– Remove fish farms from orca habitat, and ensure new fish farms are permanently prohibited from critical habitat areas
– Enforce a mandatory speed limit on commercial shipping lanes in the Salish Sea to reduce noise pollution
Click read on ro submit your letter…
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Marianna Hagbloom, a research assistant on Knowlton’s team, surveyed that area in August and said it was nothing like the Bay of Fundy.
“We had days where we were seeing about 50 individuals,” Hagbloom says. “Just right whales popping up left and right. It’s a beautiful thing to see.”
Despite those sightings, the North Atlantic right whale is seriously endangered, with a total remaining population below 450.
Their numbers have been falling for a decade, as the whales get entangled in fishing gear or killed by ships. Seventeen died in 2017 alone. In September, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration declared that there was “considerable urgency to address the issues of mortalities that stem from human activities.”…
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One of them is the bowhead whale (Balaena mysticetus), recently studied in the Fram Straight between Greenland and Svalbard. Using recordings, researchers noticed that the Spitsbergen bowheads used distinct song types for relatively short periods of time-a few months at most-and then changed them.
According to a recently released study, these bowhead whales produced more than 184 different song types over a three-year period, a level of diversity the study says is "rivalled only by a few species of songbirds."
Kit Kovacs, a researcher with the Norwegian Polar Institute and o…
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