Northern Resident Orca, Humpbacks, Dolphins and a Few Porpoise
The A23’s, Northern Resident Killer Whales, have returned to the upper Johnstone Strait and Broughtons area. Reports of salmon starting to showing up a bit more, they are following the food. We also had one report of unidentified Killer Whales around the Savary area, which could have been some of the NRKWs, but most likely Transient Bigg’s.
Humpback Whales are still in the upper Georgia Strait in numbers, and a few have, once again, been approaching boats or mugging the boats. Please use extreme caution if this happens to you on the water. Stay shut down and wait. Enjoy the show. These whales have not been known to even touch the boats they mug.
Pacific White Sided Dolphins have also been moving around, with many still in Nodales Channel, while the Dall’s porpoise seem to enjoy staying mostly in the Dent Rapids area above Yuculta Rapids.
Harbour Porpoise, on the other hand seem to be few and far between. This is quite a difference from the larger gathering we had during the fall and winter.
Keep your eyes open, report your sightings to us, and use caution on the water giving these animals plenty of room. Stop and smell the fish breath.
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Southern right whales used to be a common sight in Wellington harbour, but 150 years of whaling from the 17th century brought them to the brink of extinction.
Known as Tohora in New Zealand, the whales were targeted because of their propensity to swim close to the shore, their huge quantities of flesh and approachability….
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Members of the organization, which comprises fishermen, a biologist and other volunteers, rescued a baby humpback whale just off the coast of Brier Island, N.S.
Director Mackie Greene said they received the call around noon on Saturday and it took the rescue team about an hour and a half to reach the bay in Nova Scotia.
What they found was a whale calf with rope bound twice around its head, which would have eventually killed the animal as it grew. Greene said it took members of the team nearly four hours to remove the rope.
Greene, who co-founded Campobello Rescue with Joe Howlett in 2002, said his late teammate was definitely on his mind as he headed out Saturday….
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For watchers on board boats, new guidance suggests there should be no more than three vessels within 300m of a whale or dolphin at any one time, and that lone whale calves should not be approached closer than that distance. Encounters should be limited to 30 minutes, it suggests….
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However, according to a new study underwater noise pollution means they can only hear each other for around 10 miles.
UK marine biologist Dr. Steve Simpson says that shipping noise causes stress in whales and, by looking at the hormones of the whales we can see that they are chronically stressed by noise. When they encounter very loud noises it can even cause damage in their ears and lungs.
He is now working with shipping companies to design boat engines that make less noise. However, noise pollution is just one among many threats for whales and dolphins. Oil and chemical spills, plastic pollution and rising sea temperatures are also big concerns….
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From July 9 to Aug. 1, NOAA researchers will depart Guam to conduct the Mariana Archipelago Cetacean Survey or MACS project aboard the NOAA Oscar Elton Sette. Scientists will use the data they collect to understand the connections between whales and dolphins found offshore and nearshore to the Mariana Islands. They will also discover connections to other populations of the same species in other parts of the Pacific Ocean and around the world….
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Whale watchers on the boat tour about six nautical miles out to sea found themselves surrounded by at least 50 Orca whales from different pods.
The whales are believed to be type c Orcas – the smallest type, and are usually seen in the Ross Sea – a deep bay of the Southern Ocean in Antarctica.
They are known to migrate long distances but are not usually seen this far north and this close to shore.
Orcas are one of the most powerful predators, and are known to feast on sharks and seals.
Several humpback whales were also splashing around at the same time, appearing to harass the whales, whale watchers said….
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As Ruth Schuster at Haaretz reports, bones of both cetaceans were found near Gibraltar, indicating that the whales ranged much further afield, even using the Mediterranean Sea as a calving ground. What’s more, the bones suggest that the Romans may have participated in commercial whaling, more than 1,000 years before the Basques did off the coasts of the Gulf of Biscay in the 11th century.
According to a press release, ecologists believed that the Mediterranean was outside the historical range of gray and right whales. However, when an international team of scientists tested the DNA of bones and collagen found at five ancient fish-salting and fish-processing factories around Gibraltar, they found that both species, as well as a dolphin and elephant, were present and likely common in the region. Their findings are presented in The Proceedings of the Royal Society B….
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