Thursday, May 23, 2013

Goodbye Whale Babys.

     This will be my final post for this blog. I have never enjoyed a subject matter so much and It really was a joy to write about something I love so much on a regular day basis. Although I hope people don't take me lightly when I talk about the whales and their extinction, It will be here sooner then anyone would have wanted or expected if we continue to whale, and use fish nets how we are currently. Get involved and help save our future whale babies. I thank you all for reading my blog, or even just a post or two. Blogging has helped me as a writer really research and get involved completely with a subject and learn  creativity to find new things to say about the same subject matter for many recurring posts.

     One day I plan on having another Whale blog but hopefully all of my own findings and explorations with whales. It is something I want to make a career out of and I know I have that will power to make it happen. So see you on Discovery Channel and Animal Planet one day, and remember with every whale that dies thats 40 million krill that will survive, Krill-Tastrophe!  
                      SAVE THE WHALES!

Tag, your it.

     There are many ways that scientists can collect data from whales without harming them. Which is the number one most important thing to consider when approaching whales. Tagging is a process in which scientists attach small tracking devices along the body of a whale to trace their whereabouts and depths of the ocean the whales are diving. Thus giving them info about where they are breeding, warmer waters, and migration patterns for these huge mammals.  Finding them a save place to live and thrive is desirable and thanks to new technology and Critter Cams, small video cameras are easily attached and safely detached over time not hurting the mammal in any shape or form. The whale has no idea it is even there. According to scientist off the coast of New England using these Critter cams, they have even been able to find out that whales have a favorable left and right hand essentially like humans. About 90% turn one way, about 8% another way and a few confused percents, which is said to be about to same handiness ratio percents of majority other species and humans as well.
Suction cup tag being applied
      To me as a young aspiring scientist this sort of stuff is so powerful and almost dream worthy. Being able to simply suction cup and video camera onto the back of a huge whale, then sit back and watch its movements, see what it sees, be able to experience exactly what it is that these creatures do. It is ever changing how much we find out about these animals it will only held us protect them more and I dream to be apart of it when I complete my schooling. Check out this video of a whale camera, Tagging Along with Whales. It is the team from New England and what they do to find out more about whales and their behaviors and way of life. Enjoy! 

Fish nets = Endangerment

"He came up to us and like mouthed thank you, it was pretty awesome." Said Dave Anderson, an experienced marine naturalist and the man who after 7 hours of intense net cutting from a boat, freed a huge California Grey Whale off the coast of Dana Point California.
The Grey Whale caught in a gill line.
      March 27, 2012 a whale was spotted hung up in a gill net set out. A gill net is a huge curtain like net 20 feet below the waterline that is weighed down for certain animals to be captured. But everyone knows that our ocean is a huge vast diverse ecosystem and there is much more animals then just one likely to get caught up in a huge net. Once this trapped whale was spotted he was babysat for the night while supplies was gathered for his escape. His name was Bart, and boy oh boy was he transporting organisms along this net. They say that this poor whale seemed to have been dragging the net for about a week and had dozens of sea creatures caught in its wrath. After a long seven hours Bart made a huge dive taking buoys underwater and then was FREE!
     Everyone who was working to help save the whale was rejoiced to save at least one life. Dave Anderson said that thousands of sea creatures die from these nets and he is thankful to save at least one. I can admire this attitude and I wish I could have been there for such an amazing act of kindness in humanity. A lot of people would have seen the whale and perhaps killed it or simply left it floating struggling and caught up in the net.

     Not many whales get this lucky so I am sure Bart showed his appreciation. It was a special day. Unfortunately not for a 30-ton Sperm whale who was not able to survive after being caught in a fishing net in Jask, Iran on November 2, 2012. It is estimated about 150 large whales loose their lives to these nets a year. That is a devastating number with the small about of beautiful whales still around. Gill nets are illegal in some states, I say it is time we make the push to federalize this law and make all fishing nets with out some sort of permit or proof of "restocking" the ocean, should not be aloud. It will soon become  visibly noticeable that these fishing nets are really depleting our oceans. Write your senator, and remember; FISH ARE FRIENDS NOT FOOD.


Thursday, May 16, 2013

My Favorite Whale.

      It has been a few long weeks talking about the conservation of whales, and how we must fight to save our sea creatures numbers. But this blog I am going to talk about a lighter topic which is one of my favorite types of whales and about them.
Cachalot, Also known as the Sperm Whale. French for tooth or big tooth. The Cachalot is the largest toothed whale and the last living species of the Genus, Physeter. They were the first whale I laid my eyes on in person and have some special beauty to me. When I picture a whale they have the shape and body type that quickly comes to mind. 
     Sperm Whales have a huge head which is filled with a substance called Spermaciti. It is said to have some effect on the buoyancy of the whale, helping them swim down and float to the surface as well. This is where the word sperm in Sperm Whale comes from, not like whales reproductive sperm. That is a common misconception.  Full size male Sperm whales have been spotted up to 67 feet long, and 58 tons. Thats huge, but they say that whaling over the years has caused the species to seem smaller in size then before the second World War Because they are no longer able to grow to their full potential before they were killed, causing the breeding size to naturally shrink. Only in sperm whales, the head takes up about 1/3 of the actual body size. Making them probably the most distinctive of whales.
     Sperm whales contain the largest brains ever, modern, and extinct. About five times heavier then a humans at about 15-18 lbs. Although Sperm whales have the largest brains I find it interesting that they do not have the highest EQ level. Encephalization Quotient which according to Harvard research is essentially a Brain size, to body size intelligence number. But that does not discredit Sperm Whales as far as I am concerned. They are still beautiful amazing creatures that help our oceans ecosystems thrive and survive. So now I ask of you, Whats your favorite Whale species?









Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Beauty In Song.

 
      Have you ever heard whale recordings? Or like I previously suggested went whale watching? I keep going back to this because it is really what makes them so beautiful and unique. Whales communicate in deep and high frequency songs, about 20Hz-10kHz.
      A Researcher from University of Washington, Kate Stafford, first got a glimpse of these songs and instantly wanted to hear more. So she got a group together and they set up sound recorders on the bottom of some icy waters past Greenland to see what kinds of songs they could capture. A year later it appeared that they had what was 5 months of straight song like material from a group of critically endangered Bowhead Whales. No other research like this had been captured since they were nearly  hunted to extinction in 1970's. On their tapes Stafford said that they had at least a song for every hour recorded. A paper that tells more about the details of the whale songs made the feature page on the article Endangered Species Research.
     Reading these types of articles are so interesting to me and I enjoy that we can find little happy moments in simply placing a recorder at the bottom of the ocean and let the whales create relaxing music for us. They cropped a few of the recordings into actual songs and they are quite beautiful and calming. I encourage you to check them out for yourself and join the hunt in saving the Whale species. Here is the link vvv