Highest number of humpback whales recorded in Salish Sea - Action News
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British Columbia

Highest number of humpback whales recorded in Salish Sea

Researchers say nearly 400 humpback whales were spotted in the Salish Sea this year, the highest total ever recorded.

'We are so lucky [to have] a second chance with giants,' says researcher

Researchers are asking boaters to pay extra attention given a resurgence of humpback whales.
Researcher Jackie Hildering says as the number of humpback whales in the Salish Sea rises, it's important toteach boatershow to avoid collisionswith marine mammals and what to do if oneoccurs. (Mark Malleson)

Researchers say nearly 400 humpback whales were spotted in the Salish Sea this year, the highest total ever recorded.

There have been 396 individual humpback whales documented in the Salish Sea, including 34 mothers with their first-year calves, according to the Canadian Pacific Humpback Collaboration, a collection of groups that collate sightings from researchers, ecotourism captains, naturalists and citizen scientists.

In 2017,293 whales were documented.

Thenews comes after at least fourhumpbacks were recently found dead on B.C. beaches in the span of a few weeks.

Tasli Shaw, project lead for Humpback Whales of the Salish Sea,says there can be a misconception that humpbacksare just passing through the Salish Sea. In reality,the whales return to the same areas to feedand can stay for months at a time.

"They come here very specifically to feed, and they're very experienced and very skilled at what they do," she said.

"They know the best places to come and find prey and how best to capture it. So we actually see the same individuals year after year."

Shaw says the slow but steady rise in humpback whales tracesback to the ban on commercial whaling put in place 55 years ago.

Jackie Hildering with the Marine Education and Research Societysays as more humpbacks are spotted in the Salish Sea which includes the Juan de Fuca Strait, the Strait of Georgia and Puget Soundit's critical to protect them fromthreats, such as fishing gear entanglement and shipping traffic.

"We are so lucky [to have] a second chance with giants," Hildering said.

Hildering says part of her society's mission is toteach boatershow to avoid collisionswith marine mammals and what to do if oneoccurs.That mission is more important than ever, she says, asthe Salish Sea has become the whale equivalent of a "busy school zone."

Shaw says it remains to be seen if the numberof humpbacks will continue to rise.

"Humpback whales can move around the coast, of course, so it's hard to really predict what the continued humpback comeback will look like in the future."

Hilderingsays the growingnumbers raisequestions. Some of the increase, she said, can betraced tohumpbacks shifting from elsewhere.

"It's not just population growth. It'stoo fast for that, so it's also shifting from somewhere else. What is that telling us about a changing environment in terms of temperature and prey?"