Toronto Star

Save the whales, save $1 trillion?

- BEN GUARINO THE WASHINGTON POST

A great whale is worth $2 million (U.S). The size of that number so terrified Ralph Chami, the economist who appraised the whales, that he sought refuge in a church for the first time in 30 years.

Inside St. Matthew’s Cathedral, near Chami’s office at the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, the economist said he had “a conversati­on with the Maker. I said: ‘If you aim to humiliate me, there are other ways of doing it.’ ”

Chami had, after all, veered outside his lane to make a first-of-its-kind claim. He studies macroecono­mic policies in developing countries, not ecology. After deleting his whale calculatio­ns three times, and three times arriving at the same answer, Chami enlisted an IMF researcher, Sena Oztosun, as well as two outside economists, Thomas Cosimano and Connel Fullenkamp.

They consulted whale scientists and research papers. The world population of whales is worth more than $1 trillion, the researcher­s concluded in a recent report, due to whale tourism, the nutrients whales disperse and the carbon captured by their massive bodies.

“They didn’t get cute with the problem,” said Partha Dasgupta, an environmen­tal economist at the University of Cambridge who was not part of this work. “They made the perfectly sensible suggestion that, as a store of carbon, whales ought to be valued when alive on the basis of their carbon content.”

Carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere is a greenhouse gas, but carbon stored in a whale body does not contribute to climate change.

“It’s really exciting and a really creative approach,” said Andrew Pershing, a climate change ecologist at the Gulf of Maine Research Institute. Pershing and his colleagues calculated, in a 2010 study, that the restoratio­n of great whale population­s to pre-industrial levels would be equivalent, in tons of carbon captured, to the growth of a forest the size of Rocky Mountain National Park.

Climate change separates wildlife into survivors, including vines that thrive when carbon dioxide levels rise, and victims, such as bird species that are threatened by habitat loss and other disruption­s. A few species are emitters, such as methane-belching cattle. Great whales occupy another category: sequestere­rs. An average great whale, a hypothetic­al animal that blends the characteri­stics of large baleen whales and sperm whales, traps 33 tons of carbon dioxide in its body, Chami said. A car releases about 4.6 tons of carbon dioxide a year.

“These animals are really good at pulling carbon out of the environmen­t and storing that in tissues, in blubber,” Pershing said.

Three years ago, Chami travelled to Mexico’s Sea of Cortez to volunteer with an organizati­on called Great Whale Conservanc­y. At night, after spending days at sea on a research boat following blue whales, the conservati­onists introduced Chami to the marvels of whale ecology.

“Some people call the baleen whales the first farmers on Earth,” said Michael Fishbach, the Great Whale Conservanc­y’s executive director. Whale excrement is so rich in iron and nitrogen that whale bowel movements trigger blooms of microscopi­c phytoplank­ton. Krill eat the plankton, whales eat the krill, the whales poop, the phytoplank­ton bloom and the cycle continues.

Long-distance transfers are key. “What’s really special about whales is they live a life on this grand, global scale,” Pershing said. If a whale feeds in the same place where it digests and excretes, the ecologist said, “it’s not really adding to the system.”

But whales are mixers. They shift nutrients up the water column, a process called the whale pump. They shuttle across latitudes, from their feeding zones at the poles toward the equator, where whales give birth. (Even their placentas stimulate local ecosystems.) And when whales die, they sink. Most whale carcasses drop to the sea bed because whales with emptied lungs are slightly negatively buoyant. That process, known as a whale fall, delivers carbon to the ocean depths. An ecosystem blossoms from the whale’s flesh and bones.

Obscured by the deep ocean, whale falls are rarely spotted by humans.

Last month, marine biologists aboard the research vessel Nautilus discovered a whale fall. “There was a lot of screaming, and loud voices exclaiming ‘Whale fall!’ and gasps,” said the cruise’s lead scientist, Chad King, a research co-ordinator at Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. The vessel’s underwater robot located the whale, which came to rest on the underwater slope of an extinct volcano. It was a baleen whale, which had died a few months ago, about six metres long.

The whale left a fatty halo in the sediment. A bed of worms and bacteria surrounded the body. Fish, squat lobsters and other scavengers picked at the carcass. Red bone worms bored into the whale’s ribs. Octopuses, perhaps hunting snails and crabs, mobbed the scene. When the Nautilus crew hoisted the robot out of the water, its casing was slick with whale oil, King said.

“At last count, there were at least 100 species that we find in great abundance on whale falls and don’t find anywhere else,” said Craig Smith, a University of Hawaii marine biologist and whale fall expert. Worms named Osedax mucofloris were discovered on the body of a experiment­ally sunk minke whale in 2004. The worms are such specialize­d scavengers, they don’t have stomachs; instead, they leach fat and protein from whale bones via acid secretions and digestive bacteria.

The carbon and its consumers will remain at the seabed for years. Whale falls in the Southern Hemisphere could trap 70,000 tons of carbon a year, according to Pershing’s 2010 study, if whale population­s returned to historical size.

In exchange for data on whales and carbon, Chami and his economist colleagues have given scientists a weaponsgra­de talking point. Dollar values persuade policy-makers in ways that appeals to biodiversi­ty cannot, Chami said.

The valuation of whales was a conservati­ve minimum, the authors of the report emphasized. “The results we have now are based more or less on a composite whale. We’re looking to break this down by species,” said Fullenkamp, an economist at Duke University.

“Even if they got the details not quite right, their estimate seems right as a ballpark figure,” Dasgupta said. Notably, a living whale is valued “far higher than the market price of whales when dead.”

The price of a whale as a public good will also rise with the price of carbon. IMF recently proposed taxing carbon at $75 per ton. At that value, a whale jumps to $5 million or $6 million, Chami said.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Economic researcher­s have valued the world population of whales at more than $1 trillion (U.S.) based on tourism revenue, nutrient dispersal and carbon capture.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Economic researcher­s have valued the world population of whales at more than $1 trillion (U.S.) based on tourism revenue, nutrient dispersal and carbon capture.
 ?? MICHAEL DWYER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? When it comes to climate change, great whales are sequestere­rs of carbon dioxide, pulling it from the ocean and storing it in their tissues.
MICHAEL DWYER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO When it comes to climate change, great whales are sequestere­rs of carbon dioxide, pulling it from the ocean and storing it in their tissues.

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