Killer Whale Satellite Tags: National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration Approved To Track Endangered Whales

Killer Whale

First Posted: 01/22/2012 4:00 am Updated: 01/24/2012 3:16 pm

VANCOUVER - Approval has been given for a controversial plan to satellite tag an endangered species of killer whale that plies the waters off the Pacific Coast.

Researchers hope the tracking devices will reveal the orcas' activities during the winter, but another expert said the tagging could harm the vulnerable whales.

Southern resident killer whales are one of the most studied marine mammal species in the world, yet very little is known about where they go and what they eat during the winter months.

Brad Hanson, a wildlife biologist at the National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration, or NOAA, has U.S. government approval to attach the tiny tracking devices to the dorsal fins of six whales per season.

"We're trying to get better information about what they're doing during the winter. This is a period of time where a number of animals seem to disappear from the population," Hanson said in an interview.

"Trying to better understand what the risk factors during the winter are would potentially help management biologists...make sure we have what's necessary to meet the recovery goals that are in the recovery plan."

But Ken Balcomb, a senior scientist at the Center for Whale Research in Friday Harbour, Wash., has seen other killer whales that were tagged off Alaska and is concerned.

"They're heavy-duty barbs, and the only way (the tag) comes off is tearing away flesh and leaving a golf-ball sized hole."

The current southern resident population is 89, assuming the young calf spotted Dec. 17 is still alive, Balcomb said.

The whales travel in three separate family pods labelled J, K and L.

The average lifespan of a female killer whale is about 52, but Balcomb said one of the females in J-pod is close to 100. Males don't live as long, to an average of about 29, but a male in J-pod died last year at the age of 60.

Southern residents spend their summers around Washington state waters and off southern Vancouver Island. In the winter, they've been spotted as far north as Haida Gwaii and as far south as Monterey, Calif.

Balcomb, who's been studying southern residents for decades, said his concern is the barbs could cause an internal infection, like the minor puncture wound that killed a 20-year-old resident whale a few years ago.

"Because these whales live in an urban environment that has a lot of toxins and a lot of problems for their immune and reproductive system, they're especially susceptible to these injuries."

Hanson has tagged more than 250 whales from 15 different species and said there has been no adverse impacts connected to survival.

"There's been a lot of concern voiced about that. It's one of these things where we feel this is within the range of natural sorts of occurring tissue impact that affect the animals."

Both Hanson and Balcomb agree the whales often have cuts and scrapes on their hides and have many scars.

None of the resident whales have been tagged yet. Hanson is hoping to head out next month, but the residents aren't easy to find and in poor weather, they may not be able to tag the animals.

"They are sort of moving needles in a haystack," he said.

The tag is about the size of a nine-volt battery and it would be shot from a cross bow or pneumatic gun into the dorsal fin.

The tags can remain attached anywhere from three to nine weeks until they fall out, leaving the wound to heal on its own, Hanson said.

"Obviously, the further out we go from the tag date the more interesting the information, the more valuable it is for these longer-term monitoring periods."

The transmitter could last about six straight weeks, but in order to stretch out the life cycle, they would turn off and on the transmitter, he said.

Researchers hope to be able to follow the whales to collect samples of anything left of what the orca's have eaten and any fecal matter to determine what they've been eating.

While transient killer whales eat mammals, the diet of resident whales is mostly salmon. Hanson said they believe the whales eat chinook but that's part of what he hopes the tagging process will help determine.

A cross-border scientific panel is already looking into the possibility that limiting the lucrative chinook fishery could improve the survival rate of the resident population. A decision from the panel is expected at the end of this year.

Hanson said he hopes their research will be able to contribute some information for the panel, along with more data about where the whales hang out in order to designate critical habitat areas under the U.S. Endangered Species Act.

Balcomb isn't sure the benefits of such a study would outweigh the possible dangers.

"(They) really don't have this planned out very well. But that doesn't tell us any more than what we already know, that they go as far south as California and as far north as Haida Gwaii."

However, Hanson's research on other whales, including transient killer whale in Alaska and whales in Hawaii that look like orcas and are called false killer whales, has surprised those who have been following those whales for decades.

He said he found both species went much further away than experts believed.

Hanson expects that once scientists know more about where the residents go, it will lead to more studies.

"That's sort of my goal for Southern residents is that once we have a better ideal of where we think these guys are going, then we would probably redesign our acoustic recorder deployments to essentially target those areas they appear to be spending their time and then see if that pattern continues."

Also on HuffPost:

Morgan The Killer Whale Transferred From Netherlands To Spain
FOLLOW HUFFPOST CANADA

VANCOUVER - Approval has been given for a controversial plan to satellite tag an endangered species of killer whale that plies the waters off the Pacific Coast.Researchers hope the tracking devices wi...
VANCOUVER - Approval has been given for a controversial plan to satellite tag an endangered species of killer whale that plies the waters off the Pacific Coast.Researchers hope the tracking devices wi...
Filed by Jacqueline Delange  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 12
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
11:17 AM on 01/24/2012
What a awful idea. Why not spend all the money that will be required to tag these poor animals on CLEANING up their water and food supply?! Who gives a fig where they go in the winter and what they eat? If they are free and they are doing what needs to be done..leave them the hell alone. We've done enough damage to Orcas. FIX the problem with the water they live in and the fish they need to have to survive.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen lyons kalmenson
i poem/paint, sometimes, i ain't
10:23 AM on 01/24/2012
what would happen
if things were reversed
if animal studied us
then wrote rhyme
or prose, terse
about how ignorant
man can be
and how much they
prefer their
own company

leave them alone, let them live their cetacean lives
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
westcoastsc
Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhe
02:55 PM on 01/23/2012
For all endangered species in the ocean, there are four things that must be done immediately.

1. Put the people out of office who do not make it their number one priority to stop the pollution that enters our oceans and our environment. For the whales, this includes sonar. STOP THE POLLUTION is a huge order. An incremental goals system has to be implemented to do this. Decrease pollution reaching our oceans across the board by 2% a year until there is practically nothing.

2. The people who run the fisheries departments should be immediately fired. It's been quite some time now that studies have shown that a.) larger, older fish are the most valuable in the ocean in helping restore fish stocks. Younger, smaller fish should be our priority because they'll take years to make it to reproduction age, while the senescent fish produce roe by factors of many times that are more robust and more likely to reach adulthood. At this time, it's policy to keep the most reproductive of the fish and throw back the least productive. Doing so much harm is supposed to be counter to their policies. b.) no fishing zones replenish other areas of the ocean with fish. The rebound of stocks becomes much easier when there are fish sanctuaries where no one is allowed to fish. c.) dead zones in the ocean could be made to be fertile when seeded with fine bits of iron. These experiments must be conducted.
05:37 PM on 01/23/2012
So are you going to fire the fisheries department heads that are contributing to healthy, sustainable fisheries? Like most of the ones in Alaska? Most US fisheries are regulated by boards and Councils, not individuals. It's fair to try to get a cross section of representational voices on these boards, but talking about firing people wholesale is non-productive.
Also, dead zones in ocean are caused by an overabundance of algae and diatoms that use up all the oxygen. Iron fertilization could just make it worse.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
westcoastsc
Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhe
12:42 PM on 01/24/2012
"So are you going to fire the fisheries department heads that are contributing to healthy, sustainable fisheries?"

Did you not read what I wrote? There have been major studies that heavily implicate their practices of enforcing the wrong things as the cause of unsustainability. Why would you keep people in their jobs who are not doing their jobs? Sorry for the hyperbole, but it is important that bad policy be ended as soon as possible. It would probably not take firing everybody, but of those who have given resistance to necessary change that would improve the fish stocks must go.

Iron fertilization increases the uptake of oxygen by providing the nutrient necessary for photosynthesis in the oceans which we all know increases oxygen. You have things backwards.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
westcoastsc
Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhe
02:54 PM on 01/23/2012
3. End the coal burning. This is the main cause of the mercury getting in our fish.

4. What may be of more concern than global warming to some people is the acidification of our oceans by the increase of carbon in our atmosphere. For the survival of our oceans, it is important that we regrow our forests and use alternative forms of energy like wind, tide, solar, geothermal and conserve what energy we do use. Taxing items by progressively more by the distance and energy used to make it, clean it up, recycle it, protect the environment, provide treatment for people needed to work with it, and to transport it would cause more local industry to spring up and lower the production of hydrocarbons into the atmosphere.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
09:49 AM on 01/23/2012
Another pseudo-scientific, government funded yahoo expedition that injures the animal it is supposedly protecting. How, exactly can they do anything that affects this species? Something about fisheries? That is a fight they can't win. The "expert" speaks gibberish, but is loking forward to zooming around in his boat chasing a magnificent mammal with more intelligence than he has. Oh, and you and I pay for it.
05:41 PM on 01/23/2012
I am happy to help pay for this sort of research. The more we know about these animals, the better judgments we can make about things we do that may be affecting them, directly or indirectly. It could be that these individuals are spending much of their time away from areas of important salmon fisheries, so there is less pressure to close those fisheries. We just don't know yet.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
12:05 AM on 01/23/2012
It's a complicated issue. Will the tag kill them? sounds like no. Do they already suffer cuts and bruises, yes. Could the data save the species? maybe.

Do they need a smaller tag?

Definitely.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
shediac
04:38 PM on 01/22/2012
Hope the first Orca they try to tag is hungry...very hungry!