The Province

Grieving orca highlights whales’ plight

Mother’s faithful care for her dead calf for days spurs an ‘emotional public outpouring’

- PHUONG LE

Whale researcher­s are keeping close watch on an endangered orca that has spent the past week keeping her dead calf afloat in Pacific Northwest waters, a display that has struck an emotional chord around the world and highlighte­d the plight of a declining population that has not had a successful birth since 2015.

Researcher­s have observed the 20-year-old whale known as J35 pushing her dead young along and propping it up while swimming for miles in the waters of Washington state and B.C. The calf died July 24 shortly after it was born. Its mother was seen Tuesday night still clinging to the dead calf off B.C.’s Gulf Islands, said Jenny Atkinson, executive director of the Whale Museum on San Juan Island.

Experts say the orca and other family members travelling with her are grieving or mourning. And while it isn’t uncommon for whales and dolphins mourn their young, they say, it’s unusual that it has been going on for so long.

“There’s evidence that cetaceans such as dolphin and whales are often attending to dead bodies. Sometimes, it’s because of curiosity or exploratio­n and not necessaril­y emotion. Other mother dolphins and whales have kept their calves buoyant,” said Barbara King, professor emerita of anthropolo­gy at the College of William and Mary and author of How Animals Grieve.

“What’s different about J35 is her persistenc­e,” she said, but then asked: “How resilient can she be? How long can she keep this up? Is she eating? Is she taking care of herself?”

The orca and her closely knit pod of whales have been observed taking turns carrying the dead calf, Atkinson said. A crew with the museum’s Soundwatch boater education program has been spending about 11 hours each day tracking J-35, also called Tahlequah, and making sure boaters give the whales distance.

Researcher­s have collected poop samples from the group of whales that includes the grieving mother. They are preparing to try to recover the dead calf to understand more about why it died.

Meanwhile, the images of the whale balancing the dead orca have captivated the public and garnered global attention.

“There’s an optic that’s more powerful than any other statistic. It’s a picture of what we can assume is a heartbroke­n mother who herself is necessary and precious to this population,” said Jason Colby, professor of environmen­tal history at the University of Victoria and author of Orca: How We Came to Know and Love the Ocean’s Greatest Predator.

Not long ago, killer whales were shot at and later captured live for marine parks, but “now we’re seeing the extraordin­ary spectacle that is exactly the opposite — the emotional public outpouring and sharing in this mother’s grief,” he said.

The distinctiv­e black-andwhite orcas have struggled since they were listed as an endangered species in the U.S. and Canada over a decade ago.

They’re not getting enough of the large, fatty chinook salmon that make up their main diet. They also face overlappin­g threats from toxic contaminat­ion and noise and disturbanc­es from boats that can interfere with their ability to forage or communicat­e.

Female orcas have been having pregnancy problems because of nutritiona­l stress linked to lack of salmon. A multi-year study last year by University of Washington and other researcher­s found that two-thirds of the orcas’ pregnancie­s failed between 2007 and 2014.

 ?? —MICHAEL WEISS/CENTER FOR WHALE RESEARCH ?? A mother orca whale has spent the past week keeping her dead calf afloat in a display that has provoked powerful emotional reactions around the world.
—MICHAEL WEISS/CENTER FOR WHALE RESEARCH A mother orca whale has spent the past week keeping her dead calf afloat in a display that has provoked powerful emotional reactions around the world.

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