Medicine Hat News

Whale families bring along calf on return trip to traditiona­l feeding grounds in B.C.

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ALERT BAY, B.C.

Two northern resident killer whale families brought along a baby as they returned for the first time in 20 years to their traditiona­l winter foraging grounds in British Columbia waters.

Jared Towers, a scientist with the Fisheries Department, said he spotted the group, collective­ly known as A5, this week in the Broughton Archipelag­o, where they once fed on chinook salmon before being driven out by deafening acoustic “harassment devices” installed by fish farms.

They were meant to deter sea lions and seals, but the noise also kept orcas out of the territory that they have now reclaimed, Towers said, adding the devices were removed several years ago because of their negative impact on killer whales.

“They just stopped using the area altogether for over two decades and now it’s a sign of hope that they’re revisiting these territorie­s and perhaps feel safe enough going back into those waters,” he said of the group of islands near Alert Bay.

Towers said he saw nine whales, including a calf that appeared to be about a week old, alongside its mother, Midsummer; great-great-aunt Corky; and great-uncle Fife.

“There are at least a couple of individual­s who are alive now who were much younger the last time they were documented in that area, so these animals probably remember that when their mom was alive, that’s where she took them,” he said.

“It’s amazing to see them swimming past a little tiny beach in the middle of the strait and all of a sudden they do a 90-degree turn and head right for that beach that’s one of the only places on the entire coast where they’ll rub their bodies.”

Towers said the A5s were heard on a hydrophone in the water and identified by their dialect before he headed out to search for them.

Many of the northern resident orcas, which number about 300 and are classified as threatened in Canada, were shot by fishermen or captured for aquariums in the 1970s, he said.

They typically hang out in the waters of central and northern B.C., but don’t spend much time in the Vancouver, Victoria or Seattle areas, unlike southern resident killer whales.

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