Los Angeles Times

West Coast gray whale die-off comes to an end

Hundreds washed ashore from 2018 to 2023. NOAA attributes the phenomenon to food scarcity along the migration route.

- By Karen Garcia

The “unusual mortality event” that led to hundreds of gray whale carcasses washing up on the West Coast shoreline has ended, researcher­s say. The cause of the die-off: too little food available along the animals’ epic migratory route.

Between 2018 and 2023, carcasses of eastern North Pacific gray whales washed up on coasts from California to Alaska; the highest numbers were found between December 2018 and December 2020.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion, in consultati­on with the Working Group on Marine Mammal Unusual Mortality Events, opened its investigat­ion into the unusual mortality event in 2019.

Such an event, defined as an unexpected and significan­t die-off of any marine mammal population, requires immediate response under the Marine Mammal Protection Act.

In this case, the whale population and calf production showed significan­t signs of decline.

NOAA Fisheries — the agency responsibl­e for stewarding ocean resources — and its partners determined that 690 gray whales washed ashore from 2018 to 2023: 347 in the United States, 316 in Mexico and 27 in Canada.

This contribute­d to the decline in the gray whale population to 14,526 in 2023 from 20,500 in 2019, NOAA said, a roughly 30% drop. Calf production in 2022 totaled an estimated 217, down from about 950 in 2018, the agency said.

There are promising signs of repopulati­on, said Michael Milstein, a spokesman for NOAA. These include “the near-doubling of the number of calves counted migrating north with their mothers” last year.

The investigat­ion found that the preliminar­y cause of the event was a number of changes in the local ecosystem, including to the sea ice cover and the supply of small organ

isms on the sea f loor that the whales consume.

“Often they feed by diving to the bottom and sifting big gulps of sediment through their baleen, consuming the amphipods in great numbers,” Milstein said.

The whales migrate in the spring from the warm waters of Mexico’s Baja peninsula to the icy waters of the Arctic and sub-Arctic, where they feed until they return to Mexico in the fall to birth their calves.

A scientific journal published in 2022 reported a decrease in crustacean­s in the northern Bering and Chukchi seas, leading to the gray whales’ malnutriti­on.

A year later, another study pointed to the food scarcity as one of the potential effects of climate change, saying the lack of sea ice is reducing the availabili­ty of the Arctic prey.

“This may help explain why many of the gray whales that stranded along the West Coast beginning in 2019 were skinny and emaciated — they had not eaten enough to support their long migration of about 10,000 miles round-trip, which is one of the longest known migrations of any animal,” Milstein said.

Killer whale predation, entangleme­nt in fishing nets, biotoxins and collisions with vessels also contribute­d to the gray whale deaths. But these factors were not as significan­t as malnutriti­on, researcher­s said.

This kind of dramatic die-off also occurred between 1999 and 2000 and two other times in the early 1990s, according to John Calambokid­is, researchin­g biologist and part of the group that investigat­ed the recent unusual event.

What he and other scientists found interestin­g, Calambokid­is said, was the dramatic fluctuatio­n in the gray whale population before the mortality event.

He said that when the whale population reaches the limits of the environmen­t’s carrying capacity, there is expected to be a decrease in the reproducti­ve rate and a slight increase in the mortality rate that would bring the population to a plateau. Gray whales seem to have gone through these dramatic vacillatio­ns, enduring three periods of major mortalitie­s and bouncing back before the most recent five-year event.

As gray whales recover to levels “that are near the limits of the food supply, then suddenly they become much more vulnerable to any fluctuatio­ns in that food supply,” Calambokid­is noted.

Milstein added that gray whales were hunted to near extinction during the whaling era, but with the protection­s of the Marine Mammal

Protection Act and the Endangered Species Act, the animals have recovered to the point that they were removed from endangered species protection in 1994.

More recently, the agency noted that the startling number of strandings that spiked at the start of the unusual mortality event has since declined to annual numbers similar to those recorded before the event began.

A gray whale washed ashore in Orange County on Feb. 8 and another in Malibu this month, ABC7 reported.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? A GRAY WHALE carcass is found Feb. 8 at the Bolsa Chica State Beach inlet in Huntington Beach.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times A GRAY WHALE carcass is found Feb. 8 at the Bolsa Chica State Beach inlet in Huntington Beach.

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