
Right Whale Research Blog
7/23/09
#1: 2009 Season Starting Soon!

#45: Bay of Fundy Blog Starting Soon!!

Click here to go to the Bay of Fundy Blog. Don't forget to subscribe!!
-Jonathan


4/27/09
#44: Right Whale Struck by NOAA Vessel off Cape Cod
On Sunday April 19th, a NOAA vessel struck a North Atlantic right whale Off Scituate, MA as they were returning to shore from a research cruise. Photographs taken by the crew were compared to those taken just two days earlier by the Provincetown Center for Coastal Studies and together we were able to identify the whale.
It is a female that is so new to our database that it has yet to receive a catalog number. She was first seen in January 2006 off the coast of Florida and we believe she may be a calf from 2004 or 2005. Since her sightings off Florida 2006, she has only been seen off Cape Cod--in April of 2006, 2008, and 2009. We believe and hope that she sustained only superficial wounds from the incident, but will be eagerly awaiting photographs from the next sighting to confirm that.
The incident underscores the danger these animals face. Right whales are particularly susceptible in and around Cape Cod Bay where they spend hours feeding at, or just below, the surface. If the whale had been struck by a larger vessel at that speed, it would have likely been killed. Luckily, a recent regulation slows ships greater than 65 feet in length when they are in right whale habitats. Still, if a research cruise with dedicated observers on the fly-bridge can hit a right whale, it suggests that other, less-experienced mariners have to be even more vigilant.
- Philip
Photo Caption: File photo of a whale next to a large Container ship.
This is not the whale, nor ship, involved in the incident on April 19.
Photo Caption: File photo of a whale next to a large Container ship.
This is not the whale, nor ship, involved in the incident on April 19.
4/22/09
#43: Dr. Moira Brown in the News

"Back when I presented this issue to Irving and their colleagues in the Maritimes, some of the questions centred around if we move the shipping lanes, would the population recover,"
Irving Oil's contribution will help fund our 30th consecutive season in the Bay of Fundy this summer!
To view the article click here.
Photo taken by Yan Guilbault in the Bay of Fundy.
- Jonathan

4/1/09
#42: End of Season Wrap Up

One of the moms from this season, Baldy (Eg#1240) has proven to show some interesting patterns of travel within the season. She was first sighted on 2nd December, by the Wildlife Trust aerial survey team off the coast of South Carolina with another pregnant female. The first time she was sighted with her calf was when she was seen in the rare sighting by Virginia Aquarium whale watchers off the coast of Virginia on the January 9. But she did not stop her expeditions there, and traveled back down south, being sighted multiple times by teams in the southeast throughout the season. Baldy's grand-daughter, Boomerang was also a mom this season, and also appears to have a taste for adventure. In 2005, she took her newborn calf on a trek up the Corpus Christi River, Texas. I wonder if these future generations will follow in the fluke prints of their maternal lineage. Another fairly unusual first mom calf pair sighting was that of Calvin (Eg#2223) who was sighted by the University of North Carolina, Wilmington aerial survey team off the coast of North Carolina and then never again by teams further south. Calvin is one of the whales you can sponsor in the North Atlantic Right Whale Sponsorship Program and she is the inspiration for the Calvineers, a group of young whale conservationists.

Unfortunately, there were some fatalities witnessed during the season. Two of these showed up in North Carolina. Early in the season, a neonate calf live stranded on the beach; the calf appeared to have complications at birth which may have lead to it death. One two-year old male stranded alive on the shallow shoals just south of Cape Lookout National Seashore, in extremely poor health, and was being pecked at by birds. It was hard for veterinarians to access these sand bars but the whale (Eg#3710) was eventually euthanized. A calf carcass, severely predated upon by sharks was discovered by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission aerial survey team east of St. Augustine, FL. Following the necropsy of this animal, it is thought that this calf could also have been a victim of birth complications although this is not verified. One previously sighted mom calf pair (Gannet, Eg#2660 and calf) was later sighted without her calf and has not been sighted since.
Other shocking events of the season were the number of entanglements discovered. There were a total of five entanglements, most of which have been described in previous blog entries as events unfolded. Eg#3311 was a severely entangled whale, which veterinarians were able to successfully sedate in order to cut extensive gear wrapped around the whale's rostrum, mouth and flipper. The nature of remaining gear is unknown for three of the entanglement cases (Eg#3311, Eg#3420 and 2007 Calf of Eg#2614), although one has been sighted in Cape Cod Bay since disentanglement efforts which were made off the coast of Georgia, but it is unclear as to whether any line remains on the animal. Two whales, (Eg#3294 and 2007 Calf of Eg#1701), were successfully disentangled and have been seen gear-free multiple times in relatively good health. Efforts to free the whales of gear were performed by multi-agencies, (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission, Wildlife Trust), working in collaboration under extraordinary circumstances, and without the cooperation and dedication of all involved, such successes would not have been possible.
It seems so fresh in my memory when we arrived at our Fernandina Beach field station setting up equipment and establishing our new address. Now, as we dismantle antennas, wipe down equipment and take down charts, it is really hitting home that the season is over. And as I write this article, recalling the many occurrences and efforts from such a variety of people involved in a common passion, I am proud to have had a contribution, and yet, I am still in disbelief that four months have flown by in what seems like a blink of an eye.
Thank you everyone for following our aerial survey blog. We will keep you updated on right whale events as they happen and look forward to sharing our adventures during our summer field season in the Bay of Fundy, coming in August.
Photo Caption:
1) Baldy with her calf
2) Derecha's calf; look closely and you can see the grey markings on the right flank.
3) Our team in front of our plane; From left, Jonathan, Zach, Jess, and Kara.
-Jess, Kara, Zach, Jonathan


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The New England Aquarium is part of a massive collaborative effort to protect critically endangered North Atlantic right whales from ship strikes, gear entanglements and other threats. All work conducted and images collected in US waters are under scientific permit from NMFS. All right whale research conducted in Canadian waters are under scientific permit from Fisheries and Oceans Canada.


2015 Bay of Fundy Season (first post)
2014 Bay of Fundy Season (first post)
2013 Bay of Fundy Season (first post)
2012 Bay of Fundy Season (first post)
2011 Bay of Fundy Season (first post)
2010-2011 Jordan Basin Expedition (first post)
2010 Bay of Fundy Season (first post)
2009-2010 Aerial Survey Season (first post)
2009 Bay of Fundy Season (first post)
2008-2009 Aerial Survey Season (first post)
2008 Bay of Fundy Season (first post)
2007-2008 Aerial Survey Season (first post)
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2008 Bay of Fundy Season (first post)
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