Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

South Africa’s southern right whales need help

- TRAVEL REPORTER

THE World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) South Africa and the University of Pretoria’s (UP’s) Mammal Research Institute Whale Unit are teaming up to support research on southern right whales which are facing new threats, not least the impact of a warming climate on their food supply.

The Whale Unit, which falls under UP’s Faculty of Natural and Agricultur­al Sciences, has been monitoring southern right whale population­s since 1969. Using annual surveys, including photo-identifica­tion, their research is one of the longest continuous datasets for any marine mammal in the world, a dataset of national and internatio­nal importance.

Until about a decade ago, southern right whales had made a remarkable recovery from commercial whaling. But now, warming oceans, and consequent changes to ocean processes appear to be having a negative effect on the available food supply. This is having a noticeable impact on the number of whales visiting South African shores.

This is why WWF South Africa is partnering with UP’s Mammal Research Institute Whale Unit to enable it to continue its vital research into the well-being of these iconic whales which lie at the heart of the coastal tourism industry, generating direct and indirect income for the country.

The research manager at the Whale Unit, Dr Els Vermeulen, says: “Since commercial whaling stopped, the recovery of the southern right whale population was a great conservati­on success story. But now, science is telling us that these marine mammals are coming under renewed pressure from a more modern problem likely linked to climate change. Over the past decade, we have been finding that the whales are getting thinner, are calving less often and are leaving their breeding grounds earlier.”

In October last year, a three-day aerial survey from Nature’s Valley to Muizenberg counted some 414 whales, among them 191 mother-andcalf pairs mainly between De Hoop Nature Reserve and Walker Bay near Hermanus. This number is higher than recorded in 2019 and 2020 but remains well below what is regarded as normal.

In addition, since 2009 the number of unaccompan­ied adults (males, resting females and receptive females) has been noticeably lower, indicating that non-calving whales are still not migrating to the South African coast as readily as they used to in years gone by.

A worrying trend is that whale mothers also appear to be leaving South African breeding areas earlier than normal, which could be having a negative effect on the chances of calf survival.

Southern right whales rely heavily on their foraging success and stored energy supplies to support their reproducti­on and migration. Their body condition (“fatness”) is extremely important to ensure a successful pregnancy and calf rearing. Recent research has shown that right whale mothers have decreased in body condition by 24% since the late 1980s.

 ?? ?? A SOUTHERN right whale in De Hoop Nature Reserve and Marine Protected Area in the Western Cape.
A SOUTHERN right whale in De Hoop Nature Reserve and Marine Protected Area in the Western Cape.

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