A team of
scientists from the United States and Russia has documented the longest
migration of a mammal ever recorded – a round-trip trek of nearly 14,000 miles
by a whale identified as a critically endangered species that raises questions
about its status.
The researchers used
satellite-monitored tags to track three western North Pacific gray whales from
their primary feeding ground off Russia’s Sakhalin Island across the Pacific
Ocean and down the West Coast of the United States to Baja, Mexico. One of the
tagged whales, dubbed Varvara (which is Russian for Barbara), visited the three
major breeding areas for eastern gray whales, which are found off North America
and are not endangered.
Results of their study are
being published this week by the Royal Society in the journal Biology Letters.
Photos by
Craig Hayslip, OSU Marine Mammal Institute
“The fact that endangered
western gray whales have such a long range and interact with eastern gray
whales was a surprise and leaves a lot of questions up in the air,” said Bruce
Mate, director of the Marine Mammal Institute at Oregon State University and
lead author on the study. “Past studies have indicated genetic differentiation
between the species, but this suggests we may need to take a closer look.”
Western gray whales were
thought to have gone extinct by the 1970s before a small aggregation was
discovered in Russia off Sakhalin Island – with a present estimated population
of 150 individuals that has been monitored by scientists from Russia and the
U.S. since the 1990s.
Like their western cousins,
eastern gray whales were decimated by whaling and listed as endangered, but
conservation efforts led to their recovery. They were delisted in 1996 and
today have a population estimated at more than 18,000 animals.
Not all scientists believe
that western gray whales are a separate, distinct species. Valentin
Ilyashenko of the A.N Severtsov
Institute for Ecology and Evolution, who is the
Russian representative to the International Whaling Commission, has proposed
since 2009 that recent western and eastern gray whale populations are not
isolated and that the gray whales found in Russian waters are a part of an
eastern population that is restoring its former historical range. He is a
co-author on the study.
“The ability of the whales to
navigate across open water over tremendously long distances is impressive and
suggests that some western gray whales might actually be eastern grays,” Mate
said. “But that doesn’t mean that there may not be some true western gray
whales remaining.
“If so, then the number of
true western gray whales is even smaller than we previously thought.”
Since the discovery that
western and eastern gray whales interact, other researchers have compared photo
catalogues of both groups and identified dozens of western gray whales from
Russia matching whale photographs taken in British Columbia and San Ignacio
Lagoon in Baja California, Mexico.
Protecting the endangered
western gray whales has been difficult – five whales have died in Japanese
fishing nets within the last decade. Their feeding areas off Japan and Russia
include fishing areas, shipping lanes, and oil and gas production – as well as
future sites oil sites. Their largely unknown migration routes may include
additional hazards.
The study was coordinated by
the International Whaling Commission, with funding provided by Exxon Neftegas
Limited, the Sakhalin Energy Investment Company, the U.S. Office of Naval
Research, and OSU’s Marine Mammal Institute.
About OSU's Hatfield Marine
Science Center: The center is a research and teaching facility
located in Newport, Ore., on the Yaquina Bay estuary, about one mile from the
open waters of the Pacific Ocean. It plays an integral role in programs of
marine and estuarine research and instruction, as a laboratory serving resident
scientists, as a base for far-ranging oceanographic studies and as a classroom
for students.
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