The Mercury News Weekend

Endangered whales in calving season, but no babies seen

- By Russ Bynum The Associated Press

SAVANNAH, GA. » Scientists watching for baby right whales off the Southeast U.S. coast have yet to spot a single newborn seven weeks into the endangered species’ calving season — the longest researcher­s have gone without any sightings in nearly 30 years.

Bad weather that has limited efforts to look for whales could be to blame, rather than a reproducti­ve slump. But scientists also worry it could point to another low birth year for the imperiled whales after a grim 2017, when 17 confirmed right whale deaths far outpaced a scant five recorded births.

“We basically right now should be at the peak of the season and we haven’t seen anything, so that’s concerning,” said Clay George, a wildlife biologist who oversees right whale surveys for the Georgia Department of Natural Resources.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion estimates only about 450 Northern Atlantic right whales remain. The agency said in December the species could face extinction without new protective actions.

Researcher­s hoped for signs of a robust reproducti­ve year soon after the right whale calving season began Dec. 1. But no calves have been reported off the Atlantic coasts of Georgia and Florida, where the whales typically migrate to give birth each winter. It’s still relatively early in the calving season, which has about three months to go.

Clay said it’s the longest scientists have gone into the season without any calf sightings since 1989, when they began comprehens­ive surveys using trained spotters in planes to look for mother-and-calf pairs. Previously, the latest initial sighting was Jan. 1 — and that was during the dismal birthing season a year ago.

Right whales have averaged about 17 births per year during the past three decades. Since 2012, all but two seasons have yielded below average calf counts. The five births recorded last year were the lowest since 2000, when surveys found only one newborn whale.

The reason no calves have been spotted so far this season may have more to do with the weather. Planes used for aerial surveys have often been grounded this season because of high winds and cloudy skies.

Barb Zoodsma, who oversees the right whale recovery program in the U. S. Southeast for NOAA Fisheries, said that’s why she isn’t worrying too much yet.

Right whale reproducti­on can fluctuate greatly, year-to-year. After births bottomed out in 2000, the whales rebounded with a baby boom of 31 newborns the following year. One reason the numbers can seesaw so significan­tly is that female right whales typically give birth only once every three years or so.

Without an increase in births, right whales appear to be dying faster than they can reproduce. NOAA scientists said in December that the population has been declining since 2010, with females hit harder than males. Many whales die from being hit by ships or getting tangled in fishing gear.

Such deaths were the focus of a federal lawsuit filed Thursday by the Center for Biological Diversity and other conservati­on groups, who argued the federal government has failed to adequately protect right whales as required by the Endangered Species Act.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A female right whale swims with her calf off the Georgia coast in 2009. Seven weeks into the endangered species’ calving season this year, not a single newborn has been seen off the Southeast U.S. coast.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A female right whale swims with her calf off the Georgia coast in 2009. Seven weeks into the endangered species’ calving season this year, not a single newborn has been seen off the Southeast U.S. coast.

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