Dayton Daily News

74 rare whales remain after young orca’s apparent death

- By Allyson Chiu

Ever since birth, she had to fight to live.

The deep scratches along her back and dorsal fin not only earned her the nickname “Scarlet,” but may also indicate that the young female orca, J50, came into the world through harrow- ing means: pulled out of her mother by other whales using their mouths.

Still, she survived, and for a while restored hope that she could help her pod — part of an embattled population of southern resident killer whales known to frequent the waters near Washington state — to rebuild its numbers.

But Thursday, researcher­s announced grim news.

“J50 is missing and now presumed dead,” according to a news release from the Center for Whale Research, a group based out of San Juan Island that has studied the south- ern resident killer whales for more than 40 years. The last known sighting of the 3-year-old orca was on Sept. 7, researcher­s said.

Without J50, the population is now down to 74 members — its numbers reached nearly 100 in 1995 — and many of its existing female members are nearing the age where they will no longer be able to reproduce, Ken Balcomb, founder and principal investigat­or of the Center for Whale Research, told The Washing- ton Post in July. The pod has not produced viable offspring in three years.

“This is a sign from the whales that all is not going well out there for recovery of the southern residents,” Bal- comb told the Seattle Times on Sept. 13.

The young orca, once known for her propensity for launching her body out of the water, had become sickly and emaciated in recent months. According to the Seat- tle Times, J50, who was always small for her age, had been los- ing weight since 2017. Photos of the sick orca showed evidence of “peanut head” syn- drome, or “when fat reserves are so depleted that the connection between their body and head is visible — and looks like a peanut,” according to Whale and Dolphin Conser- vation, a Massachuse­tts-based nonprofit.

The news of J50’s bleak diagnosis came just as the population was experienci­ng another tragedy: the sudden death of a female newborn who only lived for a halfhour. The grieving mother, an orca called Tahlequah, made internatio­nal headlines over the summer when she carried her baby’s body for at least 17 days, bringing global attention to the plight of her pod.

Given the death of Tahle- quah’s baby, who was female, biologists and government officials began working fervently to devise ways to nurse J50 back to health, or risk losing another potential mother. Attempts ranged from shoot- ing antibiotic darts at her to trying to get her to eat medicated chinook salmon, the orcas’ main food source, the Seattle Times reported. Nothing seemed to work. The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s Fisheries service reported on Sept. 8 that J50 was seen the day before at times “lagging a half-mile to a mile behind the rest of her family.” She “appeared to have lost more weight and looked very thin,” the service said.

On Wednesday, experts intensifie­d their efforts, anno u nc i ng a last- d itch attempt to save J50: capturing her and treating her in temporary captivity until she could be rehabilita­ted, The Associated Press reported.

“This is a very sick whale,” Joe Gaydos, a wildlife veterinari­an with the SeaDoc Society involved in the effort to save J50, told the AP. “We don’t think she has long.”

A multiagenc­y search to find J50 was launched Sept. 13, and people spent all day scouring the waters near Washington state and Canada for her.

“Teams were on the water searching yesterday and are increasing a broad transbound­ary search today with our on-water partners and counterpar­ts in Canada,” NOAA Fisheries said. The West Coast Marine Mammal Stranding Network was also activated, and airlines flying in and out of islands in the area were on the lookout.

Other participan­ts in the search included the Coast Guard, NOAA researcher­s, whale-watching vessels and nonprofits, the Seattle Times reported.

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