Latest news going up
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Upcoming Dive shows
Care to comment? See our FaceBook page
Are Puget Sound Orcas starving to death?
âEighty-three is low. The real number thatâs of concern is that we only have about a dozen reproductive females,â said Ken Balcomb, founder of the Center for Whale Research on San Juan Island.
It is conceivable that one or more of the missing orcas might have wandered off on its own and is still alive. But orca scientists doubt that because itâs only been documented happening two times in history. Other than that, orcas always have stayed with their families. Researchers are pretty sure all seven are deadâand it makes sense, because supplies of their favorite food were so low. Two recently deceased females showed signs characteristic of starvationâparticularly a depression
behind her skull where blubber should be. The condition is known as âpeanut head.â
Chinook salmon
The development marks the biggest reduction in the orca population since a series of bad chinook salmon seasons in the 1990s battered the killer whalesâ numbers.
Revealing the degree to which the orcas are interrelated to a far-flung marine ecosystem,the collapse of Californiaâs Sacramento Valley chinook run seems likely to be partly to blame for declining killer whale numbers, said Balcomb. Studies have shown that orcas have a strong preference for chinook salmon, pursuing other prey only when their primary food source is scarce. That makes scientists wonder whether there is something particular about chinook salmon that the orcas need to thrive. âWe know that in bad chinook years the orca population declines,â Balcomb said. âItâs like if you donât feed your petsâ they donât survive. They start losing body fat.â
Chemicals to blame?
Is direct starvation the only reason?
There might be something else going on too. In recent years, scientists have noted in the orcas extremely high levels of chemicals known to interfere with reproduction,
finding food and other functions.
Like humans, orcas begin to burn their fat supplies in times of low food supplies. And the fat is where PCBs and other long-lived industrial chemicals are stored.
Do these chemicals, once freed, have some other effects? Studies on dolphins and Puget Sound harbor seals showed the chemicals caused reproductive problems and made the seals more likely to get sick. Dolphins and seals are mammals, too.
Scientists are trying to assess the health of the orcas by collecting their waste and whatâs in the breath they exhale through their blowholes.
What Hormones Reveal
A team from University of Washington measured the levels of two metabolic hormones in fecal samples from Puget Sound killer whales. The results confirmed that the orcas were under ânutritional stressâ this year.
Graduate student Katherine Ayres said levels of thyroid hormone appeared to be low this year when compared with last yearâa year when killer whale ...
Works by our contributors
Other recent news
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|













