Kapiti News

whales in a TANGLE

Simulator helps the experts understand how a giant mammal on the brink of extinction gets caught in fishing lines

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Anew simulator is letting scientists use a joystick to swim a virtual whale across a video screen. But this is no game — it’s a serious attempt to better understand how the giant mammals become entangled in fishing lines.

Tim Werner, a senior scientist at the New England Aquarium’s Anderson Cabot Centre for Ocean Life, hopes the technology will lead to safer fishing gear designs and help critically endangered North Atlantic right whales avoid the looming threat of extinction.

“If we can see how they get entangled, it would help us prevent it. The technology in computers has evolved to a state where we can model these things,” he said.

More than eight in 10 critically endangered right whales become ensnared by fishing lines, and nearly six in 10 are entangled more than once.

Entangleme­nts are a leading cause of right whale deaths. Experts estimate there are no more than 440 animals left on the planet, and the species’ future is bleak because of heavy mortality and poor reproducti­on in recent years.

Werner says the video simulation has helped his team better understand how whales unwittingl­y — and often lethally — wrap themselves in the fishing buoy lines that hang vertically in the ocean.

Marine biologists say entangled whales often can’t feed, and the stress weakens them and makes females less likely to birth calves. This past season, not a single new birth was discovered.

Aquarium scientists, working with researcher­s at Duke University, published their findings this week in the journal Marine Mammal Science, describing how they’re using a standard video game console to “swim” a computer-generated whale through heavily fished waters to recreate an entangleme­nt.

The simulator shows how a whale might flinch as it strikes a rope, then instinctiv­ely corkscrew and roll — ending up with the line hopelessly wrapped around its body and flippers.

It also lets researcher­s reverse the simulated entangleme­nt. Vikki Spruill, the aquarium’s president and CEO, says the technology is the latest effort to work with fishermen and engineers to solve the entangleme­nt threat. Scientists working with a grant from the National Oceanic Atmospheri­c Administra­tion already are testing ropeless gear with lobstermen in the Gulf of Maine.

“It’s our mission to find conservati­on measures that make a difference,” Spruill said this week. Werner said the simulator accomplish­es what scientists can’t do in real life: test fishing gear on actual whales.

“There aren’t enough of them, and we wouldn’t purposely see them get entangled,” he said. Plus, it would take decades — time the species doesn’t have — to collect enough data.

Researcher­s say they eventually may use the simulator to model and study threats to other ocean creatures.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Scientists say entangleme­nts are a leading cause of right whale deaths.
Photo / AP Scientists say entangleme­nts are a leading cause of right whale deaths.

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