Vancouver Sun

Newborn orca in B.C. waters renews hope for endangered species

- CARA McKENNA

A newborn killer whale calf discovered in the Southern Gulf Islands is being hailed as a “blessed event” for a dwindling orca population.

The baby whale — which is just a couple of days old — was spotted and photograph­ed swimming alongside its mother off the shores of

Pender Island on Tuesday.

The calf, whose gender is not yet known, is part of the J pod of the so-called southern resident killer whale population and is being labelled J-50.

Its mother, identified as J-16, at 42 years old is the oldest southern resident whale to give birth in more than four decades of field studies and was not expected to be carrying a calf.

Howard Garrett, a director of Orca Network in Washington

state who has worked with southern resident orcas for more than three decades, said this is the first successful birth for two and a half years, assuming the calf survives.

“It’s a blessed event, it’s great to see a new calf, and it’s a great way to end a year that’s had some serious disappoint­ments,” he said.

Southern resident killer whales are considered an endangered species, with just

78 in the waters of B.C. and Washington state, including the new arrival.

In early December, a 19-yearold whale identified as J-32 and a full-term fetus it was carrying were found dead off the shores of Vancouver Island. Another calf died about a month earlier.

Garrett said those deaths dashed scientists’ hopes for the population to rebound and grow in size, but he said this

birth has given researcher­s new hope that the dwindling southern resident population will rebound.

“It’s just the bare glimmer of the beginnings of, hopefully, an upwards trend,” he said.

“They’re teetering on the brink of depletion to the point of no return. There should be three or four per year to begin a growth pattern, or at least two or three just to keep up with the expected mortalitie­s.”

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