Truro News

Scientists spot rare whale in Bering Sea

- BY DAN JOLING

Federal researcher­s studying critically endangered North Pacific right whales sometimes go years without finding their subjects. Over the weekend they got lucky.

A research vessel in the Bering Sea photograph­ed two of the animals Sunday and obtained a biopsy sample from one, the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion announced Thursday.

NOAA Fisheries research biologist Jessica Crance was on board the Yushin Maru 2 when the whales were spotted. The ship is part of the Pacific Ocean Whale and Ecosystem Research program, a collaborat­ive effort headed by the Internatio­nal Whaling Commission.

Using an acoustic recorder, and between sounds of killer whales and walrus, Crance picked up faint calls of a right whale east of Bristol Bay, Alaska.

The sounds came from an estimated 16 to 51 kilometres away and the ship headed west, she said in a blog entry. After four and a half hours, despite the presence of minke and humpback whales, and only a few calls from the right whales, the rare animals were spotted.

The two right whales are part of the eastern stock that number just 30 to 50 whales, said Phillip Clapham, head of the cetacean program at NOAA’s Alaska Fisheries Science Center in Seattle.

A French whaling ship recorded the first kill in 1835 and reported seeing “millions” of others. That claim was exaggerate­d but it drew hundreds of other whalers to the Gulf of Alaska and the Bering Sea, Clapham said.

Within 14 years, Clapham said, the overharves­t of the slow, buoyant animals sent many whalers through the Bering Strait to hunt bowhead whales instead.

A modest comeback of right whales in the 20th Century was derailed when Soviet whalers in the 1960s ignored critically low numbers and illegally killed eastern stock right whales in the Gulf of Alaska, Clapham said.

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