Humpbacks Whales Remain

A publication of Wild Ocean Whale Society (WOWs)

Humpbacks Whales Remain


Cover Image:
Humpback feasting on krill

Humpback whales have stayed in the area and have expanded their range with many appearing in Desolation Sound, off of Powell River, and some as far south off of Bowen Island. Many Humpbacks were observed in Sutil Channel similar to much of the previous months of this year. A Fin whale was reported in Knight Inlet and a Minke whale was reported in Discovery Passage, both of which are rare occurences. It can be difficult to track Minke whales as they are elusive and do not travel in straight paths as other Cetaceans. They do exhibit site fidelity and a number of them can be seen regularly over the summer months off the North-East coast of Vancouver Island.

Transient Bigg’s Orca were observed in Okisollo Channel, Bute Inlet, and in Desolation Sound, with some unidentified Orca appearing off Saltery Bay south of Powell River. A few pods of Pacific White-Sided dolphins were observed with at least three of the pods being large and numbering in the hundreds. As the colder weather arrives, it will become more difficult to spot whales and dolphins out on the water. Fog will appear over many areas and waterways; however, if you are in a foggy area, rely on your ears instead to detect Cetaceans as their presence can be given away by the sounds of their blows (breaths). Let us know what you see or hear!

To learn more about the Cetacean species, Marine Mammal Rescues and Response and interactions with their food, and ours, be sure you check out our World of Whales 2018. event in November. The link can also be found in our Society News section. We hope to see you there.

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.

Society News & Events
WORLD OF WHALES 2018:
Two incredible days of multimedia whale and marine mammal presentations and workshops at the Evergreen Theater, Powell River, BC.

  • Friday, November 16, 2018 offers Two FREE presentation sessions
  • Saturday, November 17, 2018 is a full day of workshops including lunch

Go to World of Whales. for details and workshops registration

We appreciate and thank you for your kind donations. Our Donations page

Real Time Monitoring Station Live Update
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

Sightings Update
SIGHTINGS MAP – ISSUE: 2018-044
TRANSIENT BIGGS KILLER WHALES
Sat Oct 20 2018
10:22 • Biggs Orca heading south between Sonora Island and Stuart Island, Yuculta Rapids.
Fri Oct 19 2018
15:00 • Biggs Orca ◦T002Cs◦ heading west near Bjerre Rock, Okisollo Channel. ▫ Leaving the Scene
12:34 • Biggs Orca ◦T002Cs◦ heading south past Octopus Islands, Okisollo Channel. Continuing down Okisollo Channel.
12:27 • Biggs Orca ◦T002Cs◦ heading south by Upper Rapids, Okisollo Channel.
Nick Templeman, Campbell River Whale and Bear Excursions
Wed Oct 17 2018
16:30 • 4 Biggs Orca ◦T101s◦ at Shirley Point, Waddington Channel. ▫ Leaving the Scene
Reuben Buerge, Eagle Eye Adventures
14:41 • Biggs Orca on the south side of Mink Island, Cordero Channel.
Colin Griffinson, Pacific Yellowfin Charters
13:36 • est. 5-6 Biggs Orca off west side of Zephine Head, Desolation Sound.
12:16 • est. 4+ Biggs Orca milling, off Church House, Calm Channel. May have just made a kill. Splashing about.
Colin Griffinson, Pacific Yellowfin Charters
Tue Oct 16 2018
14:35 • 5 Biggs Orca heading north by Mitlenatch Island, Georgia Strait.
Radio, overheard or call out
13:00 • Biggs Orca ◦T002B Pedder; T087; T090s◦ off Amor Point heading up Bute Inlet.
Nick Templeman, Campbell River Whale and Bear Excursions
10:37 • Biggs Orca heading north between Fawn Bluff and Clipper Point, Bute Inlet. Information from Homalco 1. ▫ Second Hand
Leigh Nelson, Adventure Quest Tours
UNIDENTIFIED KILLER WHALES
Sun Oct 21 2018
18:14 • est. 4-5 Orca milling, off the Saltery Bay Ferry Terminal east of Powell River, Jervis Inlet.
Dave Jarvis, Kamloops, BC
13:43 • Orca at Saltery Bay heading toward Scotch Fir Point, Jervis Inlet. ▫ Second Hand; From Ferry
Michelle Pennell, Powell River, BC
HUMPBACK WHALES
Tue Oct 23 2018
17:56 • Humpback Whales heading south in Seymour Narrows, Discovery Passage.
Leigh Nelson, Adventure Quest Tours
12:17 • Humpback Whales north of Francisco Point, Quadra Island, Georgia Strait.
12:17 • 1 Humpback Whales in the middle of Sutil Channel. The whale dove and fluked.
Wayne Wright, Campbell River. BC
10:44 • 2 Humpback Whales milling, just south of Center Islet north-west of Subtle Islands, Sutil Channel.
10:44 • 3 Humpback Whales heading south off Whaletown, Cortes Island, Sutil Channel.
Ryan Stewart, Sonora Resort
08:44 • 2 Humpback Whales heading south in front of Black (Albion) Point, Malaspina Strait. Right on the edge of the fog bank. Saw one breach and then they disappeared in the fog.
Bill Taylor, Powell River, BC
Mon Oct 22 2018
13:38 • Humpback Whales breaching, near Van Anda, Texada Island, Malaspina Strait. Something breeched 3 times over on the edge of the fog bank by Vananda. Lost in the fog now. Seen from Albion pt – presumably Humpbacks that headed that way. ▫ Observed from Shore
Bill Taylor, Powell River, BC
12:09 • 2 Humpback Whales heading west off Chatham Point into Johnstone Strait.
Radio, overheard or call out
10:18 • 2 Humpback Whales heading south between Grief Point and Texada Island in the middle of Malaspina Strait.
Joan Treen, Powell River and Savary Island, BC
09:31 • 2 Humpback Whales heading south by Grilse Point, Texada Island, Malaspina Strait.
Michelle Pennell, Powell River, BC
Sun Oct 21 2018
17:28 • 2 Humpback Whales moving quickly, heading north between the light off Blubber Bay and Rebecca Rocks, Malaspina Strait.
Michelle Pennell, Powell River, BC
17:00 • est. 5 – 6 Humpback Whales taking long dives, heading north-west close to Worlcombe Island near the south-west tip of Bowen Island, Georgia Strait. At around 5 p.m., we were south of Worlcombe Island. A widely dispersed group of 5 – 6 Humpbacks were heading NW, traveling at a slow pace and occasionally diving. Singularly (i.e., one at a time), 2 -3 hung around Worlcombe Island for about a half hour to feed. ▫ From Power or Sail Boat
M Wright,
Humpback Whales
Humbacks heading north-west close to Worlcombe Island
Sun, 21 Oct 2018 – 3 items
M Wright,
Humpback Whales
Humbacks heading north-west close to Worlcombe Island
Sun, 21 Oct 2018 – 3 items
M Wright,
16:59 • 2 Humpback Whales between Francisco Point and Marina Island, Sutil Channel.
10:54 • Humpback Whales foraging, Cape Mudge Green Can Buoy, Georgia Strait.
Dean Parsonage, 50 North Adventures
Sat Oct 20 2018
16:00 • 2 Humpback Whales outside of Blubber Bay, Texada Island, Malaspina Strait. Came close to Texada Ferry. Observed from Powell River Viewpoint. ▫ Observed from Shore
Jim Southern, Powell River, BC
15:56 • 1 Humpback Whales between Cape Mudge Red Can Buoy and Tsa-Kwa-Luten Lodge, Georgia Strait. Large Humpback.
Wayne Wright, Campbell River. BC
15:46 • 2 Humpback Whales heading west off Kinghorn Island, Desolation Sound.
15:46 • 2 Humpback Whales heading west off Mink Island, Desolation Sound.
Elvis Chikite, Pacific Pro Dive
15:18 • 2 Humpback Whales south of Powell River Viewpoint, Malaspina Strait.
Barry Rice, Powell River, BC
14:00 • 2 Humpback Whales by Cape Mudge Green Can Buoy, Georgia Strait. Being heckled by stellar sea lions.
13:13 • Humpback Whales bucking tide, in front of Sonora Lodge by Hesler Point, Yuculta Rapids.
Ryan Stewart, Sonora Resort
09:00 • 4 Humpback Whales north of Francisco Point, Quadra Island, Georgia Strait.
Fri Oct 19 2018
10:29 • 2 Humpback Whales heading north in front of Refuge Cove, Lewis Channel. Visibility about 20 m. ▫ Second Hand
Dean Parsonage, 50 North Adventures
10:20 • 2 Humpback Whales by April Point, Quadra Island, Discovery Passage. Looks like mom and calf.
Radio, overheard or call out
08:25 • Humpback Whales between Rebecca Rocks and Texada Island, Malaspina Strait.
Michelle Pennell, Powell River, BC
Thu Oct 18 2018
17:36 • est. 2-3 Humpback Whales way out to Rebecca Rocks heading toward Texada Island.
Michelle Pennell, Powell River, BC
15:40 • 2 Humpback Whales heading north at McMullen Point, Discovery Passage. Massive humpbacks.
13:57 • 2 Humpback Whales between Cape Mudge Green Can Buoy and Marina Reef, Georgia Strait.
11:10 • 2 Humpback Whales milling, just south of Cape Mudge, Georgia Strait.
10:19 • Humpback Whales playing, in front of Campbell River Dolphins Resort, Discovery Passage. Active. ▫ Second Hand
10:01 • Humpback Whales south of Marina Reef, Sutil Channel.
09:41 • Humpback Whales toward Baker Passage. Blows.
09:41 • Humpback Whales toward Hernando Island, Georgia Strait. Blows.
09:40 • est. 3-4 Humpback Whales between Francisco Point and Cape Mudge Green Can Buoy, Georgia Strait.
09:40 • 1 Humpback Whales close to Cape Mudge Red Can Buoy, Georgia Strait.
09:32 • 1 Humpback Whales foraging, south of Cape Mudge, Georgia Strait. In the rip tide.
08:59 • 2 Humpback Whales heading north mid channel Tyee Spit, Campbell River, Discovery Passage.
Leigh Nelson, Adventure Quest Tours
Wed Oct 17 2018
16:55 • 3 Humpback Whales at Francisco Point, Quadra Island, Georgia Strait.
16:50 • 4 Humpback Whales milling, off Martin Island, Malaspina Strait.
14:30 • 1 Humpback Whales off Galley Bay, Desolation Sound.
Reuben Buerge, Eagle Eye Adventures
14:05 • 2 Humpback Whales at Coulter Bay, Cortes Island, Sutil Channel.
13:38 • 9+ Humpback Whales lunge feeding, at Wilby Shoals, Georgia Strait.
Bill Coltart, Pacific Pro Dive
12:15 • 2+ Humpback Whales near Cape Mudge Green Can Buoy, Georgia Strait. ▫ Observed from Shore
12:15 • 2 Humpback Whales off Francisco Point, Quadra Island, Georgia Strait. ▫ Observed from Shore
Reuben Buerge, Eagle Eye Adventures
09:48 • 2 Humpback Whales heading north seen from Van Anda, Malaspina Strait. ▫ Observed from Shore
09:48 • 2 Humpback Whales heading north in mid channel out from old quarry near Van Anda. ▫ Observed from Shore
Candi Little, Texada Island, BC
08:45 • 2 Humpback Whales heading north off Myrtle Point, Malaspina Strait.
Jim Southern, Powell River, BC
Tue Oct 16 2018
18:30 • Humpback Whales between Keats Island and Bowen Island, Collingwood Channel. Observed from the Bluewater area of Bowen Island. ▫ Observed from Shore
Eric Zawadzki,
17:45 • 1 Humpback Whales off Francisco Point, Quadra Island, Georgia Strait.
Leigh Nelson, Adventure Quest Tours
17:31 • 2 Humpback Whales heading south close to the shore off Willow Point, Georgia Strait.
Dean Parsonage, 50 North Adventures
17:15 • 2 Humpback Whales travelling, heading south off Yaculta, Quadra Island, Discovery Passage. Seen from home, initially close to Yaculta on Quadra, then heading south west past Cape Mudge. ▫ Observed from Shore
JH, Campbell River, BC
17:09 • 4 Humpback Whales in the middle of Sutil Channel.
Leigh Nelson, Adventure Quest Tours
15:45 • 3 Humpback Whales by Van Anda, Texada Island, Malaspina Strait.
Jim Southern, Powell River, BC
15:33 • Humpback Whales breaching, just south of the Powell River Viewpoint, Malaspina Strait. ▫ Observed from Shore
15:00 • 2 Humpback Whales around Pocahontas Bay, Texada Island, Malaspina Strait.
Jim Southern, Powell River, BC
14:16 • 3 Humpback Whales ◦BCX0565 Nick; BCZ Zest◦ closer to Marina Island in the middle of Sutil Channel.
14:16 • 3 Humpback Whales heading north close to the shore off Francisco Point, Quadra Island, Sutil Channel.
Ryan Stewart, Sonora Resort
13:00 • 3 Humpback Whales heading south just south of Grilse Point, Texada Island, Malaspina Strait.
Candi Little, Texada Island, BC
12:50 • 2 Humpback Whales heading south in Seymour Narrows, Discovery Passage. Information from a friend. ▫ Second Hand
12:48 • est. 2-3 Humpback Whales just out from Blubber Bay, Texada Island, Malaspina Strait.
Barry Rice, Powell River, BC
Humpback Whales
Humpbacks just out from Blubber Bay
Tue, 16 Oct 2018 – 7 items
Michelle Pennell, Powell River, BC
Humpback Whales
Humpbacks just out from Blubber Bay
Tue, 16 Oct 2018 – 7 items
Michelle Pennell, Powell River, BC
12:24 • 2 Humpback Whales back and forth, between the Powell River Viewpoint and Rebecca Rocks, Malaspina Strait.
09:50 • 2 Humpback Whales between Francisco Point and Baker Passage, Georgia Strait.
Leigh Nelson, Adventure Quest Tours
09:45 • Humpback Whales in Blackfish Sound. Lots of whales.
Colin Griffinson, Pacific Yellowfin Charters
09:00 • est. 2-3 Humpback Whales heading north off Van Anda, Texada Island, Malaspina Strait.
Candi Little, Texada Island, BC
Humpback Whales
Humpback heading north off of Van Anda
Tue, 16 Oct 2018 – 1 items
Candi Little, Texada Island, BC
Humpback Whales
Humpback heading north off of Van Anda
Tue, 16 Oct 2018 – 1 items
Candi Little, Texada Island, BC
08:50 • 1 Humpback Whales one mile east of Francisco Point, Quadra Island, Sutil Channel.
Mon Oct 15 2018
11:37 • 1 Humpback Whales foraging, off Francisco Point, Quadra Island, Georgia Strait. Taking long dives. ▫ From Power or Sail Boat
Bill Kennedy, Campbell River, BC
SPECIES SUPPLEMENT
Humpback Whales
Humpbacks feeding on krill
Sat, 20 Oct 2018 – 8 items
SPECIES SUPPLEMENT
Humpback Whales
Humpbacks feeding on krill
Sat, 20 Oct 2018 – 8 items
MINKE WHALES
Tue Oct 23 2018
17:58 • Minke Whales off Plumper Point, Discovery Passage.
Leigh Nelson, Adventure Quest Tours
FIN WHALES
Mon Oct 15 2018
08:30 • 1 Fin Whales foraging, heading south-west near Hill Bay at the head of Knight Inlet. Long dive between breaths of 5 minutes. ▫ Observed from Shore
Terry Curell, Croman Corporation
PACIFIC WHITE SIDED DOLPHINS
Sun Oct 21 2018
08:42 • est. 20-30 PWS Dolphins heading toward Cape Mudge Lighthouse from Big Rock, Georgia Strait.
Elvis Chikite, Pacific Pro Dive
Sat Oct 20 2018
17:58 • PWS Dolphins foraging, at Maud Island in Seymour Narrows, Discovery Passage.
Fri Oct 19 2018
12:46 • PWS Dolphins from Eagles Cove to Kanish Bay, Discovery Passage. Huge pod.
Wayne Wright, Campbell River. BC
12:08 • est. 200+ PWS Dolphins foraging, heading south, Kanish Bay. Moving very slowly.
Nick Templeman, Campbell River Whale and Bear Excursions
Thu Oct 18 2018
15:06 • est. 200 PWS Dolphins in Frederick Arm.
Wed Oct 17 2018
13:48 • PWS Dolphins in Seymour Narrows, Discovery Passage.
09:48 • PWS Dolphins heading south past the old quarry near Van Anda, Malaspina Strait. Saw several. ▫ Observed from Shore
Candi Little, Texada Island, BC
Tue Oct 16 2018
09:45 • PWS Dolphins between Swanson Island and Hanson Island, Blackfish Sound. Lots of dolphins.
Colin Griffinson, Pacific Yellowfin Charters
09:20 • est. 300 PWS Dolphins moving quickly, by Mermaid Bay heading towards Dent Rapids. Dolphins moving at at a very high speed – absolutely insane!.
Ryan Stewart, Sonora Resort
DALLS PORPOISE
Wed Oct 17 2018
11:30 • Dalls Porpoise at Mermaid Bay, Dent Rapids.
Colin Griffinson, Pacific Yellowfin Charters
HARBOUR PORPOISE
Thu Oct 11 2018
14:00 • 3 Harbour Porpoise foraging, heading north-east near Hill Bay at the head of Knight Inlet. Three in a group following the western shore of Knight Inlet. ▫ Observed from Shore
Terry Curell, Croman Corporation
SPECIES UNSURE
Mon Oct 22 2018
–:– • Species Unsure, Collingwood Channel. This morning we could hear the whale’s breathing coming from the dense fog of Collingwood Channel. Possibly Humpback whales.
Eric Zawadzki,

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The Magazine
REGIONAL
34 people rescued from whale-watching boat after engine overheats
CBC News, BC
All 34 people on board a whale-watching boat are safe after one of the vessel’s engines overheated while off the South Coast of B.C. on Tuesday morning, prompting a Coast Guard rescue.

The vessel Jing Yu, operated by Wild Whales Vancouver, was in the Strait of Georgia when a mayday call was sent at about 11:45 a.m. PT, according to the Joint Rescue Coordination Centre.

The Canadian Coast Guard and a BC Ferries vessel responded. All passengers were taken to shore by Coast Guard hovercraft, and the company towed the damaged boat….
read on

NATIONAL
Senate passes bill that would ban whale, dolphin captivity in Canada
CBC News, BC
After a multi-year legislative battle, a bill to outlaw keeping cetaceans like whales and dolphins in captivity has cleared the Senate – all but ensuring the end of a once-popular theme park attraction in Canada.

S-203 – first introduced by now-retired Liberal senator Wilfred Moore in December 2015, with the backing of Green Party Leader Elizabeth May – would ban keeping and breeding these marine mammals in captivity through amendments to the Criminal Code.

Fines of up to $200,000 could be imposed on parks flouting the law – a sum set deliberately high as a deterrent….
read on

Opening of The Northwest Passage: Marine Mammals At Risk
Whales Online, QC
With Arctic shipping routes increasingly used by merchant shipping, an ice-free Arctic Ocean could put the resistance and adaptability of marine mammals to the test. Ship strikes and increased light and noise pollution can be problematic for whales and seals. Experts expect these problems to become more and more common with the emergence of Arctic shipping lanes such as the Northwest Passage and the Northeast Passage.

Dany Dumont, oceanographer at the Rimouski Institute of Ocean Sciences (ISMER), explains that, according to some climate models, "within the next few decades, in September, when the Arctic is at its warmest, it will be possible to pass directly through the North Pole. In this context, how can the promising economic development of the Arctic Ocean be reconciled with its increasingly vulnerable ecosystem?

The study conducted by Donna Hauser and her collaborators demonstrates the vulnerability of 42 of the 80 Arctic marine mammal subpopulations sampled. Of the seven species observed, narwhals, walruses, bowhead whales and belugas are at high risk with regard to shipping. The narwhal is particularly sensitive, since its range, which occupies about a quarter of the Arctic, lies smack in the middle of several shipping lanes….
read on

For more details:

  • National Post Coverage
  • Up close and personal with Churchill’s whimsical beluga whales
    CTV News / Canadian Press
    All it takes is a quick paddle from the western shore of Hudson Bay and the smiling, curious face of a beluga whale peeks out of the water to greet kayakers floating by.

    The northern Manitoba community of Churchill is known as the polar bear capital of the world, but the largest population of beluga whales also calls its Hudson Bay coastline home.

    Dressed in a wetsuit, with the cool air of the bay at your back, you can kayak just past the community’s port and meet the inquisitive stares of dozens of the greyish-white whale. It’s an up-close and personal experience that you can’t get many other places in the world when a beluga whale swims around your kayak, giving it a playful nudge.

    As the ice melts in the spring, more than 57,000 whales – one-third of the world’s population – head into the warm waters of the estuaries formed by the Seal, Nelson and Churchill rivers to breed, feed and molt….
    read on

    A Parasite Spread by Cat Poop Is Infecting (and Probably Killing) Whales in Canada
    Live Science, UK
    In the new study, published online Sept. 27 in the journal Diseases of Aquatic Organisms, a team of marine researchers from Canada tested the brain and heart tissues of 34 beluga whales. The animals died in Quebec, Canada’s St. Lawrence Estuary between 2009 and 2012. The researchers were looking for parasites – in particular, Toxoplasma gondii. This single-celled parasite is commonly found in cats and is notoriously good at spreading to other animals, usually through feces. The team found that 15 of the whales (about 44 percent of the samples) tested positive for T. gondii.

    Still, these findings don’t prove that the whales died from this parasite, study co-author Stéphane Lair, a professor of veterinary medicine at the Université de Montréal, told the CBC. Rather, “it means [that the parasite was present] either in their heart or their brain.” [7 Strange Facts About the ‘Mind-Control’ Parasite Toxoplasma Gondii]…
    read on

    INTERNATIONAL
    Dolphin Attempts to Kidnap Other Dolphin’s Calf
    BBC Earth

    In a stunning new insight into the lives of wild dolphins, this film follows six remarkable months in the life of the ‘Beachies’: a family of six dolphins led by mother-to-be Puck, who live in the shark-infested waters of Western Australia’s Shark Bay. Using the latest miniature cameras to eavesdrop on the Beachies’ underwater lives, this moving story follows Puck and the challenges she faces bringing up her newborn calf Samu. From learning to fish, to the ever-present threat of a shark attack, no day is ever the same. Including rarely seen footage of young dolphins and revelatory new behaviour, this is a heart-warming and emotional portrayal of one of the ocean’s most revered creatures….
    read on

    Myanmar expands protected area for rare Irrawaddy dolphin
    Mongabay, USA
    The Myanmar government has expanded the Irrawaddy Dolphin Protected Area, initially spanning 74 kilometers (46 miles) of the Irrawaddy River, to include a 100-kilometer (62-mile) stretch of the river.
    Use of gillnets is restricted within the new protected area, and damaging activities such as electric or dynamite fishing and gold mining are strictly prohibited.
    An additional 100-kilometer stretch has been designated as a buffer zone, with milder restrictions.
    A survey this year put the number of critically endangered Irrawaddy dolphins in the Irrawaddy River at 78….
    read on

    Dolphins Can’t Talk to Each Other Properly Because Humans are Making Too Much Noise
    Newsweek, USA
    A team of researchers from the University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science and Cornell University found that dolphins in the Western North Atlantic modified their whistle calls in response to high noise levels caused by ships, possibly hindering their ability to talk to each other.

    Previous research has indicated that increased ambient noise levels may hinder the perception of acoustic signals (known as masking) in marine animals and have been associated with negative impacts on health and reproduction. In many species, vocal communication plays a critical role in bonding, parent-offspring interactions, warning calls, mating signals and territorial defense.

    Between July and September 2016, the team made a series of recordings using underwater microphones about 30 kilometers off the Maryland shore. They calculated levels of ambient noise and the recordings were examined for indications of bottlenose dolphin whistles. These whistles were then measured for 11 characteristics, including duration and frequency.

    The team found that the dolphins changed their vocalization characteristics during increased ambient noise. Specifically, the calls were higher in frequency and became more simplified in order to overcome the masking effect. The authors speculate that this could reduce the information content in the whistles and thus may be detrimental to the social cohesion of the group, although more research is needed to better understand this process….
    read on

    New SA study to assess skin diseases in endangered humpback dolphins
    The Citizen, SA
    Researchers from along South Africa’s east and south coasts gathered at the Nelson Mandela University’s Ocean Sciences Campus in August 2018 to discuss how to conduct a country-wide assessment of skin diseases and other injuries observed in these dolphins.

    Guided by Ocean Health Researcher, Dr Stephanie Plön, they developed a strategy to assess the diseases, ailments, and injuries visible on the skin of the dolphins and how these vary through time and space.

    One particularly intriguing skin disease, tattoo skin disease, presents as an intricate stippled pattern in an oval shape.

    The negative impact of human activities is a threat to humpback dolphins
    Humpback dolphins are endangered because they only occur in a narrow band of very shallow coastal waters, close to shore, where they are exposed to the negative impacts of human activities occurring both on land and the marine environment.

    Worrying threats include overfishing, which leads to a reduction in dolphin prey; pollution from the land such as pesticides; noisy boat traffic; and shark nets. There may be as few as 500 adults left and they are slow to reproduce. Few people have even heard of humpback dolphins. They are quite rare and shyer than their better-known cousins, the bottlenose dolphins….
    read on

    Safeguard isles hotspot teeming with cetaceans, say scientists
    The Press and Journal, UK
    A conservation charity has called for greater protection for sea life off Scotland’s west coast after extensive and "pioneering" research that identified the area as a hot spot for whales, dolphins and porpoises.

    The "extraordinary biodiversity" was revealed by the first Hebridean Marine Mammal Atlas that was compiled after 15 years of work by the Hebridean Whale and Dolphin Trust (HWDT).

    Collectively, the creatures are known as cetaceans and the waters of the Hebrides are teaming with 30,000 sightings of 23 different species or a quarter of the world’s known species – including minke whales and basking sharks.

    The survey area covered an enormous swathe from beyond Cape Wrath south to Kintyre and Northern Ireland and as far west as St Kilda, taking in the waters in and around the Outer and Inner Hebrides.

    Among the trust’s discoveries are that the Hebrides provide a vital feeding ground for minke whales and basking sharks and its researchers were the first to suggest that bottlenose dolphins live all year round off the west coast.

    The region is one of the most important areas for harbour porpoise in Europe with more than 5,000 sightings over the years – by far the most for researchers on any of the surveys.

    Despite the high porpoise numbers being reason for cheer for conservationists, other species of marine life are not so fortunate such as the UK’s only resident population of killer whales or orca….
    read on

    Leonardo DiCaprio Gets Mexican President To Commit To Saving Rare Porpoise
    Huffington Post, USA
    Leonardo DiCaprio used his star power to issue a plea on Twitter with the World Wildlife Fund to save the world’s rarest porpoise from extinction. And it appears Mexico’s president was listening.

    Enrique Peña Nieto responded on Thursday to the actor’s missive about the vaquita â?? a critically endangered mammal that only lives in a small region in the Gulf of California. In a series of tweets, the president said his country was focusing "all its efforts to prevent the extinction of the species."

    Peña Nieto’s reply represents one of the most high profile pledges to save the animal, which has seen population numbers plummet from about 60 to just 30 in the past year.

    The WWF launched a campaign this week to urge the Mexican president to address the increasingly dire threat faced by the vaquita, saying there was still time to save the few that remain.

    Researchers have been scrambling to save the elusive porpoise, which has seen populations fall by 90 percent in the past five years.

    The animals are continually threatened by illegal fishing operations and often find themselves trapped in gill nets used to catch a critically endangered fish called the totoaba. The totoaba’s swim bladder is considered a delicacy in parts of Asia, where it’s known as "aquatic cocaine" that can sell for as much as $10,000 a kilogram….
    read on

    A Ubiquitous Noise Is Silencing Whale Songs in Japanese Seas
    Inverse.com
    When a ship cuts through the ocean, its churning propulsion system generates underwater noise that’s as loud as a rock concert. For the animals that live under the passageways of commercial vessels, this is a huge problem. Scientists increasingly understand that these ship sounds are detrimentally affecting marine life, and a new study adds singing humpback whales to the list of animals impacted by passing ships.

    In a study released Wednesday in PLOS One a team of Japanese scientists reveal that male humpback whales that live around the Ogasawara Islands are changing their tune because of the sounds emitted by a passenger-cargo liner that sails past them once per day. With the help of underwater acoustic measurements, the scientists determined that the whales reduced their singing after the ship passed. At some times, the whales even stopped singing altogether….
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