East Bay Times

Researcher­s suspect new whale species has been spotted off Mexico’s coast

- By Cassandra Garrison

“It’s very rare to even see a beaked whale, and to find a friendly group of beaked whales, it’s even rarer.” — Jay Barlow, a marine mammal biologist at the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy in San Diego.

Researcher­s believe they have found a previously unknown species of beaked whale in waters off Mexico’s western coast. If confirmed, the new species would mark a significan­t discovery among giant mammals.

The team of researcher­s came upon three unusual specimens while tracking a different, rare species of typically shy beaked whales on Nov. 17 near Mexico’s remote San Benito Islands, about 300 miles south of the U.S. border.

“These animals popped to the surface right next to the boat,” said Jay Barlow, a marine mammal biologist at the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy in San Diego.

“It was just a phenomenal encounter. It’s very rare to even see a beaked whale, and to find a friendly group of beaked whales, it’s even rarer,” he said.

Barlow and his colleagues on the trip, led by the nonprofit Sea Shepherd Conservati­on Society, did not realize they were seeing a potential new species until later when studying photos they took of the animals. The whales’ teeth were unusually placed, Barlow said.

Underwater recordings of the whales’ calls also suggested they were unique, he said.

The scientists are now awaiting the analysis of water samples that could hold skin cells for possible DNA testing to confirm whether the whales are a new species, Barlow said

‘MySteRIeS IL tHe SeD’

Beaked whales — named for their pointy, dolphin-like snouts — are found mostly in remote waters, such as off the San Benito Islands.

Though up to 16.4 feet long, they can be hard for scientists to observe as they tend to swim and feed mostly at depths of about 9,843 feet, surfacing only occasional­ly for air.

At such depths, the animals have a better chance of avoiding their main predator: killer whales.

“The fact that they were looking for a very rare whale and that they happen to find something completely different is remarkable and wonderful, and just the joy of doing science,” said Andrew Read, a marine biologist at Duke University. “That’s what we all live for.”

Read said that while determinin­g a new species is a rare event, the f indings descr ibed by Barlow’s team seem consistent with a unique discovery. DNA testing would be needed to provide a conclusive answer, he said.

CDutIOuS ONtIKISK

Barlow was “cautiously optimistic” about the chance of confirming the newly encountere­d animals as a new species. That would bring the number of known beaked whale species to 24.

“It is a huge animal, the weight of a Clydesdale horse. Imagine something that big in the terrestria­l realm going undiscover­ed,” he said.

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