Houston Chronicle

Starvation and habitat threats stalk killer whales.

- By Jim Robbins

SEATTLE — For the last three one years, not calf has been born to the dwindling pods of black-andr whales spouting geysers of mist off the coast in the Pacific Northwest.

Normally four or five calves would be born each year among this fairly unique urban population of whales — pods named J, K and L. But most recently, the number of orcas here has dwindled to just 75, a 30-year at low in what seems to be an inexorable, perplexing decline.

Listed as endangered since 2005, the orcas are essentiall­y starving, as their primary prey, the Chinook, or king salmon, are dying off. Just last month, another one of the Southern Resident killer whales — one named named “Crewser that had not been seen since last November — was presumed dead by the Center for Whale Research.

In March, Gov. Jay Inslee issued an executive order directing state agenmore more to protect the whales, and in May he convened the Southent ern Resident Orca Task Force, a group of state, tribal, provincial and federal officials, to devise ways to stem the loss of the beloved regional creature. “I believe we have orcas in our soul in this state,” he said. At another point, he wrote of the whales and Chinook salmon that “the imtting pacts of let these two species disappear would be felt for generation­s."

are also facing a new threat. The recent agreement between the Canadian government and organ to expand the Trans Mountain Pipeline would multiply oil tanker traffic through the some estimates and potentials spills. Constructi­on is set to begin in August, despite opposition from Inslee and many environmen­talist. in the late 1990s, there were nearly 100 of these giant whales in the population. following the salmon, they migrate in Salish Sea to the northern coast of Bristish Columbia ang often surface in the south at Puget Southern within sight of downtown Seatlle, especially during the spring and summer months. The males which weigh up to 22,000 pounds, typically live about 30 years, and females, up to 16,000 pounds, survive longer — up to 50 or 60 years, although one J-pod member, Granny, lived to be 105 years old.

Not only are there fewer calves in recent years, but signs of inbreeding also point to a weakening population. In the 1970s and 80s, theme parks like Sea World captured nearly 4 dozen orcas from the region, possibly shrinking the pods’ gene pool. In the last three decades, just two males fathered half the calves in the last three decades, and only a third of the females are breeding, just once every decade instead of every five years. Researcher­s worry that reproducin­g females are aging out of the population, and will not be replaced.

Some conservati­onists are concerned that the orcas’ decline is another sign of a marine ecosystem in collapse. Beginning in 2013, something known as “The Blob” — a gigantic mass of nutrient poor, extremely warm water — warmed the Pacific from Mexico to Alaska, as much as six degrees above normal. Several years ago, starfish succumbed to a wasting disease and vanished from tide pools.

Much is still unknown about the plight of these orcas, but biologists and conservati­on managers have zeroed in on several main factors — and they are all connected.

The biggest contributi­ng factor may be the disappeara­nce of big king salmon — fish more than 40 inches long. “They are Chinook salmon specialist­s,” said Brad Hanson, team leader for recovery efforts for the Northwest Fisheries Science Center here, part of NOAA. “If they could, they would eat Chinook salmon 24/7.” Orcas gobble 30 a day. Hunting enough smaller prey requires a lot more energy.

The underwater world in the region is also getting noisier, especially an area between the San Juan Islands and Vancouver Island called Haro Strait. It is one of the orcas’ favorite foraging grounds in the summer.

“It’s also essentiall­y a big rock ditch where sound bounces off. When you add in commercial vessel traffic going to Vancouver, recreation­al boaters and whale watching operations, it’s a pretty noisy place,” Hanson said.

Researcher­s are studying noise there now. They believe the cacophony of ship traffic interferes with echolocati­on and makes it harder for the whales to locate their prey and to communicat­e prey location among themselves. It can also cause hearing loss.

In recent years, officials have expanded the distance which vessels, including whale watching boats and kayaks, must keep from the whales. And there is a voluntary no-go zone near the San Juan Islands.

“Just the presence of boats can cause the whales to spend less time feeding,” said Lynne Barre, of NOAA Fisheries, recovery coordinato­r for the orcas. “And it’s harder to communicat­e. They have to call longer and louder when boats are nearby.”

Another factor is the pollution in Puget Sound. Whales that live off the coast of Seattle, Tacoma and other cities are effectivel­y urban whales buffeted by municipal and industrial waste, and the occasional spillage from wastewater treatment plants into the ocean. Killer whales carry some of the highest levels of pollution of any marine animal.

Of most concern are the lingering effects of chemicals and pesticides, including the now banned DDT, as well as PCBs and PPDE, widely used in flame retardants and found through the world. The pollutants accumulate in salmon as they feed, and when the whales eat salmon they also ingest PCBs at even higher levels.

“It’s very lipophilic, which means it stays in the fat, and the females transfer a huge proportion of the contaminan­t burden to their offspring,” Hanson said. “About 85 percent gets transferre­d to calves through lactation.”

And while much of the pollution is from the region’s industrial past, Boeing disclosed this spring that over the past five years it had discharged highly toxic PCBs into the Duwamish River, which flows into Puget Sound, thousands of times over the legal limit.

These toxins suppress the whales’ immune systems, making them more susceptibl­e to disease. They can also impede reproducti­on. That may be why tests show a high number of females who have become pregnant have failed to calve.

However, the decline of the whales cannot be pegged, experts say, to contaminan­ts alone. A separate population of transient whales near here eat mammals that eat fish, and so consume concentrat­e contaminan­ts at even higher levels — many times as high as the resident pods. Yet they are thriving, which has left scientists scratching their heads. Global population­s are robust as well.

One possible scenario is that the dearth of salmon coupled with the interferen­ce of engine noise, which can affect their immune system, too, deprives the orcas of a sufficient diet. Their bodies then draw on fat reserves, which are laced with chemicals that suppress their immune system and reduce fecundity.

But experts are not sure what is raising their mortality rate. Often, when whales die, their carcasses sink or wash up onto remote beaches and are hard to find and test.

In recent years, researcher­s have been focusing on anthropone­ses, diseases that humans may be passing to wildlife. Scientists have sailed out among the pods with a petri dish at the end of a 25-foot long pole to pass through the mist that whales exhale and see what they carry in their lungs. They found a range of pathogens that could be from humans, including antibiotic resistant bacteria and staphyloco­ccus, which can cause pneumonia.

“It doesn’t mean they are sick, we don’t have evidence for that,” said Linda D. Rhodes, a research biologist expert in marine microbes and toxins and part of the study. “It means they are being exposed. Whether or not the whales get sick is a product of how much of it is present in the environmen­t and how well is the whale able to defend itself.”

There is deep concern that a fatal human or animal disease has, or will, cross the species barrier and find its way into these immunocomp­romised killer whales. “I’ve had dreams about it at night,” said Joseph K. Gaydos, a veterinari­an with the SeaDoc Society in Eastsound, Washington in the San Juan Islands, who studies the southern residents. “Disease smolders in the environmen­t but can break out. If there were a highly virulent virus to come through here it would take out a large part of the population and totally stop recovery efforts.”

Disease threats are myriad. A young killer whale died from a fungal infection last year. Toxoplasmo­sis is a disease spread by parasites in the feces of cats. It is one of the top threats to the Hawaiian monk seal, killing eight of the remaining 1,400 since 2001. It is not known, though, to affect whales.

Canine distemper from dogs is also a concern. It is a morbillivi­rus, which is an RNA rather than a DNA virus. Some 1,500 dolphins were killed by a single outbreak of morbillivi­ruses on the East Coast several years ago.

“RNA viruses can mutate rapidly and cross species lines,” Gaydos said.

Steps are being planned to help the whales persevere. More Chinook salmon are being reared in hatcheries as whale food, but that is far from a certain fix.

In the end trying to maintain a population of whales in the shadow of one of the fastest-growing cities in the country may not be possible.

“It’s an ecosystem-wide problem,” Hanson said. “Things are out of whack and we have to get them back to where we can sustain killer whales. And the clock is ticking.”

Losing the charismati­c, intelligen­t animals with the distinctiv­e blackand-white “paint job” and permanent smile would be a blow to the area.

“There would be a great sense of loss,” Rhodes said. “They are such a part of our identity here. It would be a real sense of failure.”

 ?? Stuart Isett / New York Times ?? The population of endangered black-and-white killer whales has hit a 30-year low, numbering only 75 this year.
Stuart Isett / New York Times The population of endangered black-and-white killer whales has hit a 30-year low, numbering only 75 this year.
 ?? Steve Martarano / U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service via The New York Times ?? Scientists suspect the biggest contributi­ng factor may be the disappeara­nce of Chinook salmon.
Steve Martarano / U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service via The New York Times Scientists suspect the biggest contributi­ng factor may be the disappeara­nce of Chinook salmon.

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