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North Atlantic right whale

The North Atlantic right whale (Eubalaena glacialis) is a baleen whale, one of three right whale species belonging to the genus Eubalaena,[1] all of which were formerly classified as a single species. Because of their docile nature, their slow surface-skimming feeding behaviors, their tendencies to stay close to the coast, and their high blubber content (which makes them float when they are killed, and which produced high yields of whale oil), right whales were once a preferred target for whalers. At present, they are among the most endangered whales in the world,[6] and they are protected under the U.S. Endangered Species Act and Marine Mammal Protection Act and Canada's Species at Risk Act. There are fewer than 370[7] individuals in existence in the western North Atlantic Ocean—they migrate between feeding grounds in the Labrador Sea and their winter calving areas off Georgia and Florida, an ocean area with heavy shipping traffic. In the eastern North Atlantic, on the other hand—with a total population reaching into the low teens at most—scientists believe that they may already be functionally extinct.[6] Vessel strikes and entanglement in fixed fishing gear, which together account for nearly half of all North Atlantic right whale mortality since 1970,[8] are their two greatest threats to recovery.[9][10]

North Atlantic right whale[1]
Mother and calf
Size compared to an average human
CITES Appendix I (CITES)[3]
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Order: Artiodactyla
Infraorder: Cetacea
Family: Balaenidae
Genus: Eubalaena
Species:
E. glacialis
Binomial name
Eubalaena glacialis
(Müller, 1776)
Range map
Synonyms[4][5]
  • Balaena biscayensis Eschricht, 1860
  • B. glacialis Müller, 1776
  • B. glacialis glacialis Scheffer & Rice, 1963
  • B. mysticetus islandica Kerr, 1792
  • B. nordcaper Lacépède, 1804
  • Baloena glacialis Robineau, 1989
  • E. glacialis glacialis Tomilin, 1957
  • Hunterius swedenborgii Lilljeborg, 1867
  • Macleayius britannicus Gray, 1870

Description Edit

 
Skeleton specimen exhibited in the Pisa Museum of Natural History

Like other right whales, the North Atlantic right whale, also known as the northern right whale or black right whale,[2] is readily distinguished from other cetaceans by the absence of a dorsal fin on its broad back, short, paddle-like pectoral flippers and a long arching mouth that begins above the eye. Its coloration is dark grey to black, with some individuals occasionally having white patches on their stomachs or throats. Other unique features include a large head, which makes up a quarter of its total body length, narrow tail stock in comparison to its wide fluke and v-shaped blowhole which produces a heart-shaped blow.[11][12]

The most distinguishing feature for right whales is their callosities, rough, white patches of keratinized skin found on their heads. The right whale's callosities provide habitat for large colonies of cyamids or whale lice, which feed on the right whale's skin as these small crustaceans cannot survive in open water.[13] The relationship between cyamids and right whales is symbiotic in nature but is poorly understood by scientists. Callosities are not caused by the external environment and are present on fetuses before birth.[13] However, Cyamids near the blowhole have been linked to chronic entanglement and other injuries; their presence in this area has been used as measure of individual health in visual health assessments.[14][15]

Adult North Atlantic right whales average 13–16 m (43–52 ft) in length and weigh approximately 40,000 to 70,000 kg (44 to 77 short tons), they are slightly smaller on average than the North Pacific species.[16] The largest measured specimens have been 18.5 m (61 ft) long and 106,000 kg (234,000 lb).[17] Females are larger than males.

Up to forty-five percent of a right whale's body weight is blubber.[18] This high percentage causes their body to float after death due to the low density of blubber.

There is little data on their lifespan, but it is believed to be at least 70 years although individuals in species closely related to right whales have been found to live more than 100 years. Currently, female North Atlantic Right whales live on average 45 years and males 65 years. Age of right whales can be determined by examining their earwax postmortem.[12]

Behavior Edit

Surface activities Edit

 
"SAG" (Surface Active Group)
 
Cow and calf

Aside from mating activities performed by groups of single female and several males, so called SAG (Surface Active Group), North Atlantic right whales seem less active compared to subspecies in southern hemisphere. However, this could be due to intense difference in number of surviving individuals especially calves that tend to be more curious and playful than adults, and small amount of observations. They are also known to interact with other baleen whales especially with Humpback whales[19] or Bottlenose dolphins.[20]

Vocalization Edit

North Atlantic right whales recordings are available online.[21][22] Many effective automated methods, such as signal processing, data mining, and machine learning techniques are used to detect and classify their calls.[23]

Reproduction Edit

North Atlantic right whales are promiscuous breeders.[24] They first give birth at age nine or ten after a year-long gestation; the interval between births seems to have increased since the 1990s, and now averages three to six years. Calves are 13–15 feet (4.0–4.6 m) long at birth and weigh approximately 3,000 pounds (1,400 kg).[25]

Feeding Edit

Right whales feed mainly on copepods and other small invertebrates such as krill, pteropods, and larval barnacles, generally by slowly skimming through patches of concentrated prey at or below the ocean surface.[2] Sei whales and basking sharks (sometimes minke whales as well) are in positions as food competitors and are known to feed in the same areas, swimming next to each other,[26] but there have not been any conflicts observed between these species.

Taxonomy Edit

 
North Atlantic right whale skeleton found on the Thames in 2010 at Bay Wharf, Greenwich

The whale's scientific name is Eubalaena glacialis, which means "good, or true, whale of the ice".

The cladogram is a tool for visualizing and comparing the evolutionary relationships between taxa. The point where a node branches off is analogous to an evolutionary branching – the diagram can be read left-to-right, much like a timeline. The following cladogram of the family Balaenidae serves to illustrate the current scientific consensus as to the relationships between the North Atlantic right whale and the other members of its family.

Family Balaenidae
 Family Balaenidae 
  Eubalaena (right whales)  

 E. glacialis North Atlantic right whale

 E. japonica North Pacific right whale

 E. australis Southern right whale

 Balaena (bowhead whales) 

 B. mysticetus bowhead whale

The right whale family, Balaenidae[27]

Another so-called species of right whale, the "Swedenborg whale" as proposed by Emanuel Swedenborg in the 18th century, was by scientific consensus once thought to be the North Atlantic right whale. However, the 2013 results of DNA analysis of those fossil bones revealed that they were in fact those of the bowhead whale.[28]

Whaling Edit

 
Whaling in small wooden boats with hand harpoons was a hazardous enterprise, even when hunting the "right" whale.

As the "right" whale continued to float long after being killed, it was possible to 'flense' or strip the whale of blubber without having to take it on board ship. Combined with the right whale's lack of speed through water, feeding habits, and coastal habitat, they were easy to catch, even for whalers equipped only with wooden boats and hand-held harpoons.[29]

Basques were the first to commercially hunt this species. They began whaling in the Bay of Biscay as early as the eleventh century.[30] The whales were hunted initially for whale oil, but, as meat preservation technology improved, their value as food increased. Basque whalers reached eastern Canada by 1530.[31] The last Basque whaling voyages were made prior to the commencement of the Seven Years' War (1756–1763). A few attempts were made to revive the trade, but they failed. Shore whaling continued sporadically into the 19th century. It had previously been assumed that Basque whaling in eastern Canada had been the primary cause for the depletion of the sub-population in the western North Atlantic, but later genetic studies disproved this.[32][33]

 
A 46-foot long whale, possibly taken by Captain L. Berg in Dyre Fjord (is)[34] during a marine research expedition to the Norwegian Sea, Iceland and Jan Mayen in the 19th century (by Fridtjof Nansen)

Setting out from Nantucket and New Bedford in Massachusetts and from Long Island, New York, Americans took up to one hundred right whales each year, with the records including one report of 29 whales killed in Cape Cod Bay in a single day during January 1700.[35] By 1750, the North Atlantic right whale population was, for commercial purposes, depleted. Yankee whalers moved into the South Atlantic before the end of the 18th century. The population was so low by the mid-19th century that the famous Whitby whaler Rev. William Scoresby, son of the successful British whaler William Scoresby senior (1760–1829), claimed to have never seen a right whale (although he mainly hunted bowhead whales off eastern Greenland, outside the normal range of right whales).[36]

Based on back calculations using the present population size and growth rate, the population may have numbered fewer than 100 individuals by 1935.[35] As it became clear that hunting right whales was unsustainable, international protection for right whales came into effect, as the practice was banned globally in 1937. The ban was largely successful, although violations continued for several decades. Madeira took its last two right whales in 1967.[37] After the fall of the Iron Curtain, it was discovered that from the 1950s to the 1970s the Soviet Whaling fleet had actually killed several thousand right whales, with little regard to the IWC's regulations. The actual numbers that were killed were kept a close secret, but the scandal came to light when Russian biologists stepped forward to correct data that had been misreported to the IWC.[38]

Threats Edit

For the period 1970 to October 2006, humans have been responsible for 48% of the 73 documented deaths of the North Atlantic right whale.[8] A 2001 forecast showed a declining population trend in the late 1990s, and indicated a high probability that North Atlantic right whales would go extinct within 200 years if the then-existing anthropogenic mortality rate was not curtailed.[39] The combined factors of small population size and low annual reproductive rate of right whales mean that a single death represents a significant increase in mortality rate. Conversely, significant reduction in the mortality rate can be obtained by preventing just a few deaths. It was calculated that preventing the deaths of just two females per year would enable the population to stabilize.[39] The data suggests, therefore, that human sources of mortality may have a greater effect relative to population growth rates of North Atlantic right whales than for other whales. The principal factors known to be retarding growth and recovery of the population are ship strikes and entanglement with fishing gear.[35][40]

Ship strikes Edit

 
Skeleton of "Stumpy",[41] a North Atlantic right whale whose death by ship strike[42] helped lead to laws that require slower cargo ship speeds in whale migration routes.

The single greatest danger to this species is injury sustained from ship strikes.[43] Between 1970 and October 2006, 37% of all recorded North Atlantic right whale deaths were attributed to collisions.[8][29] During the years 1999–2003, incidents of mortality and serious injury attributed to ship strikes averaged 1 per year. For the years 2004–2006, that number increased to 2.6.[2] Additionally, it is possible that the official figures actually underestimate the actual ship-strike mortality rates, since whales struck in offshore areas may never be sighted due to low search effort.[8]

In 2002, the International Maritime Organization shifted the location of the Traffic Separation Scheme (TSS, i.e. shipping lanes) in the Bay of Fundy (and approaches) from an area with the highest density of North Atlantic right whales to an area of lower density.[44] This was the first time the IMO had changed a TSS to help protect marine mammals.[45] In 2006, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) established a set of recommended vessel routes to reduce ship strikes in four important eastern-US right whale habitats.[46] In 2007, and again on June 1, 2009, NOAA changed the TSS servicing Boston to reduce vessel collisions with right whales and other whale species.[47] NOAA estimated that implementing an "Area To Be Avoided" (ATBA) and narrowing the TSS by 1 nautical mile (1.9 km) would reduce the relative risk of right whale ship strikes by 74% during April–July (63% from the ATBA and 11% from the narrowing of the TSS).[48] In 2008, the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) and NOAA enacted a series of vessel speed restrictions to reduce ship collisions with North Atlantic right whales for ships in certain areas along the East Coast of the United States in order to reduce the probability of fatal ship strikes.

Fishing gear entanglement Edit

 
Disentanglement by NOAA staff off Jacksonville, Florida

The next greatest source of human-induced mortality is entanglement in fixed fishing gear such as bottom-set groundfish gillnet gear, cod traps and lobster pots. Between 1970 and October 2006, there have been 8 instances where entanglements have been the direct cause of death of North Atlantic right whales. This represents 11% of all deaths documented during that period. From 1986 to 2005, there were a total of 61 confirmed reports of entanglements, including the aforementioned mortalities. It is likely that official figures underestimate the actual impacts of entanglement. It is believed that chronically entangled animals may in fact sink upon death, due to loss of buoyancy from depleted blubber reserves, and therefore escape detection.[8]

According to a 2012 New England Aquarium report, 85 percent of the whales have had rope entanglement at least one time and it is the leading cause of death.[49]

A whale that survives an entanglement episode may be weakened, have reduced fertility, or become vulnerable to further injury. Because whales often free themselves of gear following an entanglement event, scarring may be a better indicator of fisheries interaction than entanglement sightings. A 2012 analysis of the scarification of right whales over the years 1980 to 2009 showed that 82.9% of all North Atlantic right whales experienced at least one fishing gear entanglement, 59.0% have had more than one such experience, and an average of 15.5% of the population are entangled in fishing gear annually.[50]

In 2007, so as to protect northern right whales from serious injury or mortality from entanglement in gillnet gear in their calving area in Atlantic Ocean waters off the southeast United States, the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) revised regulations implementing the Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Plan (ALWTRP). This plan expands the restricted area to include the waters off of South Carolina, Georgia, and Northern Florida. It also prohibits gillnet fishing or even gillnet possession in those waters for a period of five months, beginning on November 15 of each year, which coincides with the annual right whale calving season.[51]

When entanglement prevention efforts fail, disentanglement efforts occasionally succeed, despite the fact that such efforts are more frequently impossible or unsuccessful. Nevertheless, they do in fact make a significant difference because saving a few whales in a population of only 400 has a large positive effect against mortality rates. During the period 2004–2008 there were at least four documented cases of entanglements for which the intervention of disentanglement teams averted a likely death of a right whale.[35] For the first time in 2009 and again in 2011, scientists successfully used chemical sedation of an entangled whale to reduce stress on the animal and to reduce the time spent working with it. After disentangling the whale, scientists attached a satellite tracking tag, administered a dose of antibiotics to treat entanglement wounds and then another drug to reverse the sedation.[9] Despite concerns that the trauma might impair reproduction, researchers confirmed in January 2013 that three disentangled whales had given birth.[52]

Due to recently increased presences of right whales in Cape Breton to St. Lawrence regions, increases in entanglements and possible ship strikes have been confirmed[53][54][55] as well including serious fatal cases[56] involving three whales between June 24 and July 13, 2015.[57]

A female known as Snow Cone gained attention in September 2022 after being spotted off the coast of Massachusetts dragging fishing gear. The 17-year-old whale, who had been continuously entangled for at least 18 months, and was covered in lice and swimming slowly, was considered beyond saving by scientists.[58]

In 2022, the Marine Stewardship Council revoked its certification for the commercial Gulf of Maine lobster fishery, citing risks of entanglement of North American right whales in lobster-fishing gear. The same year, Seafood Watch added the American and Canadian Maine lobster fisheries to its "red list" to seafood species to avoid, for the same reason. The MSC and Seafood Watch led some retailers to stop selling Maine lobster. The decision was welcomed by whale-conservation groups, but opposed by the Maine lobster industry and elected officials in Maine, where the fishery is economically important.[59]

Noise Edit

A 2011 analysis of data collected in the Bay of Fundy has shown that exposure to low-frequency ship noise may be associated with chronic physiological stress in North Atlantic right whales.[60]

Naval training near calving grounds Edit

The US Navy proposed plans to build a new undersea naval sonar training range immediately adjacent to northern right whale calving grounds in shallow waters off the Florida/Georgia border. In September 2012, legal challenges by 12 environmental groups were denied in federal court, allowing the Navy to proceed.[61][62]

Climate change Edit

Climate change poses a threat to the North Atlantic right whale as global temperatures increase and ocean processes change. Long migratory periods, gestations, and time gaps between calves results in slow-growing right whale populations.[63] A brief change in food availability (in particular Calanus finmarchicus) can affect right whale populations for years after. Females must have access to plenty of food to successfully make it through pregnancy and produce enough milk to rear a calf. To illustrate the species’ sensitivity to food availability, in 1998 zooplankton populations dropped dramatically following a climate shift. Even though zooplankton abundance began to rise again in 1999, right whales have such a long reproduction and migratory cycle that the population was greatly affected by the minimal food availability from the year before. In 1999, only one right whale calf was born, compared to the 21 that were born in 1996, before the climate shift. In 2001, after the zooplankton populations greatly recovered, 30 calves were born.[64]

Zooplankton abundance has been found to be associated with the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), the most influential climate force in the Northern Hemisphere.[65] Periodically, pressure anomalies in the system shift from positive to negative as determined by the NAO Index, affecting temperatures and wind patterns. Abundant zooplankton populations have been linked to a positive NAO Index. As global temperatures increase, the NAO is predicted to shift more often and to greater intensities (so-called marine heatwaves).[66] These shifts will likely greatly affect the abundance of zooplankton, posing a great risk for right whale populations that cannot rapidly adapt to a new food source.

Climate change causes warming of the ocean, and in turn changes ocean circulation patterns. This changes the foraging patterns and habitat of the North Atlantic right whale, "reducing the population’s calving rate and exposing it to greater mortality risks from ship strikes and fishing gear entanglement".[67]

2017 Unusual Mortality Event Edit

As defined by the Marine Mammal Protection Act an Unusual Mortality Event (UME) demands immediate response and is characterized by a stranding that is unexpected or involves a significant die-off of any marine mammal population. In 2017, a UME began in the North Atlantic right whale population. 2017 saw the population of under 400 suffer 17 deaths as a result of anthropogenic threats (12 in Canada, 5 in the U.S). In 2018 there were 3 deaths attributed to anthropogenic threats, and in 2019 another 10 were lost to such causes. 9 of the deaths were attributed to vessel strikes and 8 to entanglement with the rest lacking a thorough examination to determine the cause of death. The same time period (2017-2019) saw an additional 8 severely injured, as in they were observed in a condition that would likely kill them within weeks to months.[68]

Population and distribution Edit

It is not known how many populations of North Atlantic right whales existed prior to whaling, but the majority of studies usually consider that there were historically two populations, one each in the eastern and western North Atlantic. There are however two other hypotheses which claim, respectively, one super-population among the entire North Atlantic (with mixing of eastern and western migratory routes occurring at locations in relatively high latitudes such as in the Denmark Strait), and three sub-populations of eastern, western, and central Atlantic right whales (with the central stock ranging from Greenland's Cape Farewell in summer to the Azores, Bermuda, and Bahamas in winter,[69][70] although recent study indicates that the Azores had probably been a migratory corridor rather than a wintering ground).[71]

Recent studies revealed that modern counterparts of the eastern and western populations are genetically much closer to each other than previously thought.[72] Right whales' habitat can be affected dramatically by climate changes along with Bowhead whales.[73]

Western population Edit

 
Continuous callosities are visible which are distinctive to the Atlantic species.
 
Interacting with dolphins

In spring, summer and autumn, the western North Atlantic population feeds in a range stretching from Massachusetts to Newfoundland.[74] Particularly popular feeding areas are the Bay of Fundy, the Gulf of Maine and Cape Cod Bay.[75] In winter, they head south towards Georgia and Florida to give birth. According to census of individual whales identified using photo-identification techniques, the latest available stock assessment data (August 2012) indicates that a minimum of 396 recognized individuals were known to be alive in the western North Atlantic in 2010, up from 361 in 2005.[6][35] Distributions within other parts of Bay of Fundy is rather unknown, although whales are occasionally observed at various locations in northern parts such as in Baxters Harbour[76] or at Campobello Island.[77]

Though their numbers are still scarce, some right whales migrate regularly into the Gulf of St. Lawrence, notably around the Gaspé Peninsula[78][79] and in the Chaleur Bay,[80][81][82][83] and up to Anticosti Island, Tadoussac and in the St. Lawrence River[84][85][86] such as at Rouge Island.[87] Until 1994, whales were regarded as rather vagrant migrants into St. Lawrence region, however annual concentrations of whales were discovered off Percé in 1995 and sightings in entire St. Lawrence regions have been shown gradual increases since in 1998.[88] For example, in the survey conducted by the Canadian Whale Institute in 2006, three whales were detected off the peninsula.[89] Some whales including cow and calf pairs also appear around Cape Breton Island with notable increasing regularities in recent years, notably since in 2014, and about 35 to 40 whales were confirmed around Prince Edward Island and Gaspe Peninsula in 2015.[54] Further, the whales' regular range is known to reach up to off Newfoundland and the Labrador Sea, and several have been found in a former whaling ground east of Greenland's southern tip.[90]

Parts of the western group, especially for those seen regularly in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, display different migratory or calving routines than other whales and these are so-called "Offshore Whales". There could be various areas along or off the west coasts where could have been frequented by whales potentially and might be re-colonized in the future such as Quoddy, Eastport,[91] Plymouth Harbor,[92] Sagamore Beach,[93] Island of Nantucket, Florida Bay, Pamlico Sound, Gulf of Mexico (as far as to Texas[94][95]), Bahamas, Long Island Sound and vicinity to New York City,[96][97] the mouth of Potomac River, Delaware and Chesapeake Bay, the mouth of Altamaha River,[98] Cape Canaveral, Sebastian Inlet and around Melbourne. As the population grows, it's also highly possible that more whales would start using rivers or river mouths, shallow estuaries, smaller inlets or bays. Whales have already seen repeatedly at various of these such as Indian River Inlet,[99][100][101] Delaware River,[102][103] Cape Cod Canal,[104] and Jacksonville Drum.[105]

In early 2009, scientists recorded a record number of births among the western North Atlantic population. 39 new calves were recorded, born off the Atlantic coast of Florida and Georgia:

"Right whales, for the first time in a long time, are doing their part: they're having the babies; they're having record numbers of babies. We need to be vigilant and still do our part to prevent the whales from being killed."

— Monica Zani, New England Aquarium, Endangered right whales appear to be on the rebound, CNN.com[25]

In contrast, 2012 was the worst calving season since 2000, with only seven calves sighted – and one of those was believed to have died. This is significantly below the annual average of 20 calves per year over the last decade.[6] As the gestation period for right whales is a year long, researchers believe that a lack of food in the whales' summer feeding grounds in the Bay of Fundy during the summer of 2010 may be linked to the poor season in 2012.[106] The right whale was purported to have reached a population of 500 in the North Atlantic, which was assumed to have been achieved for the first time in centuries, when counted in 2013.[107] The population of the whale has been increasing at about 2.5 percent per year, but this is below the optimal goal of 6 or 7 percent that researchers were hoping to attain.[107]

There were 411 of these animals left in 2019, when calves were born after a barren 2018.[108]

As of 2021, the population is estimated to be down to 350 whales.[109]

Aerial and shipboard surveys are conducted annually to locate and record seasonal distribution of North Atlantic right whales along the northeast and southeast United States coast. Researchers identify individual right whales, document whale behavior, monitor new calves, and respond to entangled whales.[110] The surveys have been used to produce seasonal maps showing the density of right whales (number of animals per square kilometer) throughout the U.S. east coast and Nova Scotia.[111] NOAA Fisheries maintains an interactive map of recent right whale sightings.

Eastern population Edit

In the eastern North Atlantic, the right whale population probably numbers in the low double digits at best, with little information known about their distribution and migration pattern. Scientists believe that this population may be functionally extinct.[6] The last catch occurred in February 1967 from a pod of three animals including a cow-calf pair: one escaped in Madeira and one was taken in the Azores.[112]

Cintra Bay[113] and Bahia Gorrei,[114] about 150 kilometers south of Villa Cisneros in the Western Sahara, the only known historical calving ground for this group, host no animals (or if any, then likely very few) nowadays, holding a situation similar to the Bay of Biscay area where many whales once congregated throughout years. Although there were several sightings in the late 20th century (see Bay of Biscay) and catch records indicate whales historically used the bay for both feeding and wintering, it is still unclear whether or not the Biscayne coasts were ever used as calving grounds. Other parts of coastlines or oceanic islands from Iberian Peninsula and Portugal to Morocco in north to south possibly reaching even Mauritania to Senegal.[115] Locations such as Dakhla Peninsula and Bay of Arguin had been served potentially as wintering grounds similar to the Cintra and Gorrei Bays region. Historic presence of any summering or wintering grounds within the Mediterranean Basin including Black and Azov Sea is unknown although it has been considered to be feasible.[116]

Entire European regions including French coasts, Hebrides, North and Baltic Seas, and further north up to Swedish, and Norwegian areas were once ranged by whales. Phenology of catch records in the early twentieth century in Nordic countries shows that whale presences in northern waters was at peak in June.[112] In Ireland, catches were concentrated in the first half of June until 1930s and preceded catch in the Scottish bases of the Hebrides[117] which were concentrated in the second half of June and July, and this indicates that those whales were likely to migrate along Irish coasts. Of all modern whaling grounds in European waters, Hebrides and the Shetland Islands were the center of whaling in the early 20th century, and any records afterwards these catches became scarce in eastern Atlantic where only two cow-calf pairs had been documented.[112]

Any calm waters in north such as Porth Neigwl, the Wadden Sea region,[118] Cornwall coasts, Moray Firth and in Irish Sea[119] could have been migratory colliders/feeding or resting grounds, or seasonal habitats to stay for less-migrating or resident (fully or partially) individuals. Some might have reached to entrance of Baltic Sea and northern Scandinavian. Based on historical records, Scandinavian waters once had been a potential feeding area,[119] and this idea corresponds with behaviors of the below mentioned vagrant individual "Porter"[120] recorded in 1999 when he stayed in the fjord for several weeks, indicating the area provided to him a feasible condition for summering. Historical records suggest that summering grounds could have reached further north to northern coasts of Scandinavian Peninsula, and some might have turned up at the mouth of Hudson Bay.[121]

Predicted summering range models suggest that small numbers of right whales could have been present year-round in the Mediterranean Sea although it is unclear whether whales ever penetrated Turkish Straits to Marmara, Black, and Azov Seas (historical presences at northern Aegean Sea were considered in this study which didn't include the northernmost basins in study areas).[122]

Sightings and confirmations in recent years Edit

 
The last whale killed in Orio

There have been a few sightings further east over the past few decades, with several sightings close to Iceland in 2003. There was speculation that these could be the remains of a virtually extinct Eastern Atlantic stock, but examination of old whalers' records suggest that they are more likely to be strays from further west.[31] A few have been sighted in waters adjacent to Norway (two documented sightings in 1926 and 1999), Ireland,[123][124] shelf waters west of Scotland,[125] Irish Sea,[119] the Bay of Biscay in Spain, off the Iberian Peninsula, a cow-calf pair at Cape St. Vincent in Portugal, and continuous sightings of a single animal off the southwestern Tenerife in the Canary Islands in 1995. Subsequently, there have been two more sightings in Benderlau, La Gomera and some other observations were reported in Portugal and Galicia. A whale of unknown species, thought to be a right whale, was seen off Steenbanken, Schouwen-Duiveland (Netherlands) in July 2005 and was possibly the same animal previously seen off Texel in the West Frisian Islands.[126] Another possible sighting was made along Lizard Point, Cornwall in May 2012.[127]

Few recent sightings have also been recorded from pelagic waters such as off Hebrides[128] and on Rockall Basin[129] as late as in 2000s.

Right whales have also on rare occasion been observed in the Mediterranean Sea.[116] Since the two records of a stranding (Italy) and a capture of one of a pair seen (Algeria) in early 20th century, one sighting recorded in Dutch sighting scheme possibly between 1954 and 1957,[112] only one possible sighting have been confirmed. In May 1991, a petty officer of the Italian Navy happened to be in the water with his camera about 13 km (8.1 mi) off the small island of Sant' Antioco (southwestern Sardinia), when a right whale happened to swim by[130] – his photos comprise the only confirmed sighting in the 20th century; on the other hand however, reliability of the record have been questioned due to failures to contact the photographers. Earlier known occurrences of right whales in the basin include the stranding of a juvenile near Taranto (southeastern Italy) in 1877 and the sighting of two (one of which was later captured) in the bay of Castiglione (Algiers) in 1888[131][132] and Portugal.[133] The Norway sightings appear to be of vagrants, or strays from the western Atlantic stock.[134] Catch records at Cape Verde Islands in spring-summer seasons are highly doubtful.[69]

Below is a list of some of recent records of right whales in eastern North Atlantic (not all of above-mentioned records and excluding vagrant records, according to the Spanish edition of this article). Records and confirmations close to Newfoundland, Iceland, and Cape Farewell are also excluded.

Year Location Type of record Notes
1805 Hondarribia Capture
1854 San Sebastián Capture
1878 Getaria, Gipuzkoa Capture
1893 San Sebastián Capture
1901 Orio Capture [135]
1914 Azores Capture failed [112]
Prior to 1930 Off the coast of Porto Capture [136]
Between 1939 and 1949 Capelinhos, Faial Island Observation [112]
Between 1954 and 1957 Mediterranean Sea Observation [112]
January 1959 Madeira Capture (pregnant female) [137][112]
1959–1966 Cape Clear Island, Ireland 5 separate observations [112]
1964 Off Cork, Ireland Observation
(uncertain being included in above records)
[138]
February 1967 Madeira Capture* [139]
August 1970 Cape Clear Island, Ireland Observation [37][112]
1977 or 1978 (September) Cape Finisterre, Galicia 43°00′N 10°30′W / 43.000°N 10.500°W / 43.000; -10.500 Observation [30]
June 1980 Bay of Biscay Observation (two whales) [112]
July–October 1980 Between Harris and St Kilda, Scotland Observation [112]
Second half of 20th century Dutch coast Bones found [140]
July 1987 Mid Atlantic, off Iceland Observation [123]
1987 Mid Atlantic, off Spain Observation [138]
1993 Near A Coruña, Estaca de Bares, Galicia Land-based observation (breaching individual) [141]
1995 Cape St. Vincent, Portugal Observation (the only cow-calf pair in recent times) [133]
Channel between Tenerife and La Gomera Observation [131]
La Gomera Two separate observations [142]
Channel between Tenerife and Gran Canaria Observation
Between Punta de Teno and Punta Scratch Observation [133][143]
Between June 1998 and January 1999 La Gomera Observation [144]
1990s or 2000s Off Donegal Two observations [145]
May 2000 Hatton Bank, off Ireland and Britain Observation [123]
July 2000 Off northern Shetland Islands Observation (unclear if duplicate of above) [146]
2012 Lizard Point, Cornwall
(possibly previously encountered by a kayaker in nearby areas)
Possible observations [127]
* A male accompanied a cow-calf and only the male fled

Vagrants from the Western Population Edit

Some eastern sightings have been officially confirmed to be of vagrants from the western population. A right whale seen off Cape Cod in May 1999 was later seen in the Kvænangen fjord in Troms, Northern Norway in September 1999. This individual was later confirmed to be "Porter", an adult male in the catalog (No.1133). He was seen again back in Cape Cod in winter 2000, having traveled for over 7,120 miles (11,460 km), making this the longest ever traveling record of right whales.[147][148] The area vicinity to Scandinavian Peninsula was once in the historical "North Cape Ground", one of the major whaling grounds for this species in the 17th century.

In January 2009, one animal was sighted off Pico Island, Azores, the first confirmed appearance there since 1888. This animal was later identified as a female from the western Atlantic group, and nicknamed as "Pico" according to this event.[149]

Some individuals are known to show interesting patterns of movements which may possibly help researchers to deepen understandings of future re-colonization to eastern Atlantic, if possible.[150]

Possible central population Edit

Several biologists have mentioned the possibility that a third population exists, which ranges from near Iceland or Greenland in the north to Bermuda or the Bahamas in the south.[69] Some right whales are now said to live primarily in Icelandic waters, occasionally joining up with the western population.[151] In July 2003, a research team from the New England Aquarium investigated the possibility of right whales inhabiting the Cape Farewell region. They recorded a sighting of a female right whale in the Irminger Sea, southwest of the Iceland coast. She was later named "Hidalgo" due to a scar mark on her head resembling a horse.[152]

In 2009, right whales appeared in waters around Greenland[153] although their origin was not confirmed.[154] Prior to this, no right whales had been killed or confirmed present off the coast of Greenland for around 200 years[155] except for the sighting of "1718", a unique animal seen only twice (off Cape Farewell in July 1987 and at the Nova Scotian Shelf in June 1989). Several sightings in the area made in the 1970s may or may not be of right whales, as the critically endangered population of Bowhead whales are also present in the area.

For southward migration, the sighting of two whales displaying courtship behaviors in the Bermuda was recorded by a team of researchers including Roger Payne in April, 1970.[69]

Conservation status Edit

 
Reconstruction of a North Atlantic right whale
 
West Edmonton Mall's North Atlantic right whale bronze statue "Open Sea"

In the United States, this species is listed as “endangered” by the NMFS under the Endangered Species Act.[156] It is also listed as "depleted" under the Marine Mammal Protection Act.[157]

In Canada the species is federally protected under the Species at Risk Act (SARA).[158] Since entanglement in floating gear accounted for 82% of documented right whale deaths in 2022,[159] the Canadian Wildlife Federation has been providing ropeless equipment to snow crab fishers in and around the Gulf of St Lawrence.[160]

On a global level, the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS, or the "Bonn Convention") is a multilateral treaty specializing in the conservation of migratory species, their habitats and migration routes. CMS has listed the North Atlantic right whale on Appendix I, which identifies it as a migratory species threatened with extinction.[161] This obligates member nations to strive towards strict protection of these animals, habitat conservation or restoration, mitigation of obstacles to migration, and control of other factors that might endanger them.[citation needed]

Additionally, CMS encourages concerted action among the range states of many Appendix I species.[162] To that end, a small portion of the eastern Atlantic population's range is covered by the Agreement on the Conservation of Cetaceans in the Black Sea, Mediterranean Sea and Contiguous Atlantic Area (ACCOBAMS).[163] The Atlantic area bounded on the west by a line running from Cape St. Vincent in southwest Portugal to Casablanca, Morocco, and on the east by the Strait of Gibraltar.

Another multilateral treaty, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, (CITES, or the “Washington Convention”), also lists the North Atlantic right whale on its own Appendix I. Being so listed prohibits international trade (import or export) in specimens of this species or any derivative products (e.g. food or drug products, bones, trophies), except for scientific research and other exceptional cases with a permit specific to that specimen.[3]

Whale watching Edit

 
Curious whale lifting head, showing distinctive callosities to observers on boats

Either land based or organized whale watching activities are available along east coasts from Canada in north to Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Florida to south. Stellwagen Bank Sanctuary has also been designated for watching this species. Onlookers lucky enough can spot them from shores time to time on whales' migration seasons especially for feeding (vicinity to Cape Cod such as at Race Point and Brier Island), and breeding/calving (off Georgia to Florida coasts) when whales strongly approach shores or enters rivers or estuaries such as at Outer Banks, Pamlico Sound, Indian River Inlet, Cape Lookout, Virginia Beach, Virginia, Golden Isles of Georgia, beaches on Florida (e.g. most notably at Flagler, Jacksonville, St. Augustine, Ponte Vedra, Satellite, Crescent, and Cocoa, and any others like Ormond, New Smyrna, South Melbourne, Wrightsville, Vero), Boynton, and so on. There are some piers used for lookout points such as at Jacksonville and Wrightsville.

With their low profile on the water, right whales can be difficult to spot, so all fishermen and boaters transiting through potential right whale habitat should keep a sharp lookout. Boaters should be advised that NOAA Fisheries has a "500-yard rule", prohibiting anyone from approaching within 500 yards (1,500 ft; 460 m) of a North Atlantic right whale.[164] The regulations include all boaters, fishing vessels (except commercial fishing vessel retrieving gear), kayakers, surfers, and paddleboarders,[165] and agencies such as the United States Coast Guard and the Massachusetts Environmental Police have been authorized to enforce it.[166]

Right whale sightings can be valuable to researchers, who recommend all sightings be reported.[167] In Florida, the Marine Resources Council maintains a volunteer sighting network to receive sighting information from the public and verify sightings with trained volunteers.[168]

Due to the species' status, as of 2014, there is no whale watching location in eastern and mid Atlantic, and oceanic islands feasible to observe right whales regularly. Among these, only off Iceland right whales have been encountered during watching tours (save for expeditions and land-based observations targeting for birds and other faunas), and several observations were made in Iceland during the 2000s.

See also Edit

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External links Edit

  • North Atlantic Right Whale Consortium
  • North Atlantic Right Whale Research at the New England Aquarium
  • Digital North Atlantic Right Whale Catalog by New England Aquarium
  • North Atlantic Right Whale species information at the Smithsonian Ocean Portal
  • NOAA – National Marine Fisheries Service – North Atlantic Right Whale
  • has acoustic autobuoys in between the lanes of the Traffic Separation Scheme approaching Boston.
  • Smithsonian Institution – North American Mammals: Eubalaena glacialis
  • Voices in the Sea – Sounds of the North Atlantic Right Whale
  • Humans pushing North Atlantic right whale to extinction faster than believed. The Guardian, October 30, 2020.
  • Animal activists say Senate omnibus bill condemns right whale to extinction. The Guardian, December 1, 2022.

north, atlantic, right, whale, eubalaena, glacialis, baleen, whale, three, right, whale, species, belonging, genus, eubalaena, which, were, formerly, classified, single, species, because, their, docile, nature, their, slow, surface, skimming, feeding, behavior. The North Atlantic right whale Eubalaena glacialis is a baleen whale one of three right whale species belonging to the genus Eubalaena 1 all of which were formerly classified as a single species Because of their docile nature their slow surface skimming feeding behaviors their tendencies to stay close to the coast and their high blubber content which makes them float when they are killed and which produced high yields of whale oil right whales were once a preferred target for whalers At present they are among the most endangered whales in the world 6 and they are protected under the U S Endangered Species Act and Marine Mammal Protection Act and Canada s Species at Risk Act There are fewer than 370 7 individuals in existence in the western North Atlantic Ocean they migrate between feeding grounds in the Labrador Sea and their winter calving areas off Georgia and Florida an ocean area with heavy shipping traffic In the eastern North Atlantic on the other hand with a total population reaching into the low teens at most scientists believe that they may already be functionally extinct 6 Vessel strikes and entanglement in fixed fishing gear which together account for nearly half of all North Atlantic right whale mortality since 1970 8 are their two greatest threats to recovery 9 10 North Atlantic right whale 1 Mother and calfSize compared to an average humanConservation statusCritically Endangered IUCN 3 1 2 CITES Appendix I CITES 3 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass MammaliaOrder ArtiodactylaInfraorder CetaceaFamily BalaenidaeGenus EubalaenaSpecies E glacialisBinomial nameEubalaena glacialis Muller 1776 Range mapSynonyms 4 5 Balaena biscayensis Eschricht 1860 B glacialis Muller 1776 B glacialis glacialis Scheffer amp Rice 1963 B mysticetus islandica Kerr 1792 B nordcaper Lacepede 1804 Baloena glacialis Robineau 1989 E glacialis glacialis Tomilin 1957 Hunterius swedenborgii Lilljeborg 1867 Macleayius britannicus Gray 1870 Contents 1 Description 2 Behavior 2 1 Surface activities 2 2 Vocalization 2 3 Reproduction 2 4 Feeding 3 Taxonomy 4 Whaling 5 Threats 5 1 Ship strikes 5 2 Fishing gear entanglement 5 3 Noise 5 3 1 Naval training near calving grounds 5 4 Climate change 6 2017 Unusual Mortality Event 7 Population and distribution 7 1 Western population 7 2 Eastern population 7 2 1 Sightings and confirmations in recent years 7 2 2 Vagrants from the Western Population 7 3 Possible central population 8 Conservation status 9 Whale watching 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksDescription Edit nbsp Skeleton specimen exhibited in the Pisa Museum of Natural HistoryLike other right whales the North Atlantic right whale also known as the northern right whale or black right whale 2 is readily distinguished from other cetaceans by the absence of a dorsal fin on its broad back short paddle like pectoral flippers and a long arching mouth that begins above the eye Its coloration is dark grey to black with some individuals occasionally having white patches on their stomachs or throats Other unique features include a large head which makes up a quarter of its total body length narrow tail stock in comparison to its wide fluke and v shaped blowhole which produces a heart shaped blow 11 12 The most distinguishing feature for right whales is their callosities rough white patches of keratinized skin found on their heads The right whale s callosities provide habitat for large colonies of cyamids or whale lice which feed on the right whale s skin as these small crustaceans cannot survive in open water 13 The relationship between cyamids and right whales is symbiotic in nature but is poorly understood by scientists Callosities are not caused by the external environment and are present on fetuses before birth 13 However Cyamids near the blowhole have been linked to chronic entanglement and other injuries their presence in this area has been used as measure of individual health in visual health assessments 14 15 Adult North Atlantic right whales average 13 16 m 43 52 ft in length and weigh approximately 40 000 to 70 000 kg 44 to 77 short tons they are slightly smaller on average than the North Pacific species 16 The largest measured specimens have been 18 5 m 61 ft long and 106 000 kg 234 000 lb 17 Females are larger than males Up to forty five percent of a right whale s body weight is blubber 18 This high percentage causes their body to float after death due to the low density of blubber There is little data on their lifespan but it is believed to be at least 70 years although individuals in species closely related to right whales have been found to live more than 100 years Currently female North Atlantic Right whales live on average 45 years and males 65 years Age of right whales can be determined by examining their earwax postmortem 12 Behavior EditSurface activities Edit nbsp SAG Surface Active Group nbsp Cow and calfSee also Whale surfacing behaviour Aside from mating activities performed by groups of single female and several males so called SAG Surface Active Group North Atlantic right whales seem less active compared to subspecies in southern hemisphere However this could be due to intense difference in number of surviving individuals especially calves that tend to be more curious and playful than adults and small amount of observations They are also known to interact with other baleen whales especially with Humpback whales 19 or Bottlenose dolphins 20 Vocalization Edit North Atlantic right whales recordings are available online 21 22 Many effective automated methods such as signal processing data mining and machine learning techniques are used to detect and classify their calls 23 Reproduction Edit North Atlantic right whales are promiscuous breeders 24 They first give birth at age nine or ten after a year long gestation the interval between births seems to have increased since the 1990s and now averages three to six years Calves are 13 15 feet 4 0 4 6 m long at birth and weigh approximately 3 000 pounds 1 400 kg 25 Feeding Edit Right whales feed mainly on copepods and other small invertebrates such as krill pteropods and larval barnacles generally by slowly skimming through patches of concentrated prey at or below the ocean surface 2 Sei whales and basking sharks sometimes minke whales as well are in positions as food competitors and are known to feed in the same areas swimming next to each other 26 but there have not been any conflicts observed between these species Taxonomy EditMain article Eubalaena nbsp North Atlantic right whale skeleton found on the Thames in 2010 at Bay Wharf GreenwichThe whale s scientific name is Eubalaena glacialis which means good or true whale of the ice The cladogram is a tool for visualizing and comparing the evolutionary relationships between taxa The point where a node branches off is analogous to an evolutionary branching the diagram can be read left to right much like a timeline The following cladogram of the family Balaenidae serves to illustrate the current scientific consensus as to the relationships between the North Atlantic right whale and the other members of its family Family Balaenidae Family Balaenidae Eubalaena right whales E glacialis North Atlantic right whale E japonica North Pacific right whale E australis Southern right whale Balaena bowhead whales B mysticetus bowhead whaleThe right whale family Balaenidae 27 Another so called species of right whale the Swedenborg whale as proposed by Emanuel Swedenborg in the 18th century was by scientific consensus once thought to be the North Atlantic right whale However the 2013 results of DNA analysis of those fossil bones revealed that they were in fact those of the bowhead whale 28 Whaling EditMain article History of whaling See also History of Basque whaling nbsp Whaling in small wooden boats with hand harpoons was a hazardous enterprise even when hunting the right whale As the right whale continued to float long after being killed it was possible to flense or strip the whale of blubber without having to take it on board ship Combined with the right whale s lack of speed through water feeding habits and coastal habitat they were easy to catch even for whalers equipped only with wooden boats and hand held harpoons 29 Basques were the first to commercially hunt this species They began whaling in the Bay of Biscay as early as the eleventh century 30 The whales were hunted initially for whale oil but as meat preservation technology improved their value as food increased Basque whalers reached eastern Canada by 1530 31 The last Basque whaling voyages were made prior to the commencement of the Seven Years War 1756 1763 A few attempts were made to revive the trade but they failed Shore whaling continued sporadically into the 19th century It had previously been assumed that Basque whaling in eastern Canada had been the primary cause for the depletion of the sub population in the western North Atlantic but later genetic studies disproved this 32 33 nbsp A 46 foot long whale possibly taken by Captain L Berg in Dyre Fjord is 34 during a marine research expedition to the Norwegian Sea Iceland and Jan Mayen in the 19th century by Fridtjof Nansen Setting out from Nantucket and New Bedford in Massachusetts and from Long Island New York Americans took up to one hundred right whales each year with the records including one report of 29 whales killed in Cape Cod Bay in a single day during January 1700 35 By 1750 the North Atlantic right whale population was for commercial purposes depleted Yankee whalers moved into the South Atlantic before the end of the 18th century The population was so low by the mid 19th century that the famous Whitby whaler Rev William Scoresby son of the successful British whaler William Scoresby senior 1760 1829 claimed to have never seen a right whale although he mainly hunted bowhead whales off eastern Greenland outside the normal range of right whales 36 Based on back calculations using the present population size and growth rate the population may have numbered fewer than 100 individuals by 1935 35 As it became clear that hunting right whales was unsustainable international protection for right whales came into effect as the practice was banned globally in 1937 The ban was largely successful although violations continued for several decades Madeira took its last two right whales in 1967 37 After the fall of the Iron Curtain it was discovered that from the 1950s to the 1970s the Soviet Whaling fleet had actually killed several thousand right whales with little regard to the IWC s regulations The actual numbers that were killed were kept a close secret but the scandal came to light when Russian biologists stepped forward to correct data that had been misreported to the IWC 38 Threats EditFor the period 1970 to October 2006 humans have been responsible for 48 of the 73 documented deaths of the North Atlantic right whale 8 A 2001 forecast showed a declining population trend in the late 1990s and indicated a high probability that North Atlantic right whales would go extinct within 200 years if the then existing anthropogenic mortality rate was not curtailed 39 The combined factors of small population size and low annual reproductive rate of right whales mean that a single death represents a significant increase in mortality rate Conversely significant reduction in the mortality rate can be obtained by preventing just a few deaths It was calculated that preventing the deaths of just two females per year would enable the population to stabilize 39 The data suggests therefore that human sources of mortality may have a greater effect relative to population growth rates of North Atlantic right whales than for other whales The principal factors known to be retarding growth and recovery of the population are ship strikes and entanglement with fishing gear 35 40 Ship strikes Edit nbsp Skeleton of Stumpy 41 a North Atlantic right whale whose death by ship strike 42 helped lead to laws that require slower cargo ship speeds in whale migration routes Further information Vessel speed restrictions to reduce ship collisions with North Atlantic right whales The single greatest danger to this species is injury sustained from ship strikes 43 Between 1970 and October 2006 37 of all recorded North Atlantic right whale deaths were attributed to collisions 8 29 During the years 1999 2003 incidents of mortality and serious injury attributed to ship strikes averaged 1 per year For the years 2004 2006 that number increased to 2 6 2 Additionally it is possible that the official figures actually underestimate the actual ship strike mortality rates since whales struck in offshore areas may never be sighted due to low search effort 8 In 2002 the International Maritime Organization shifted the location of the Traffic Separation Scheme TSS i e shipping lanes in the Bay of Fundy and approaches from an area with the highest density of North Atlantic right whales to an area of lower density 44 This was the first time the IMO had changed a TSS to help protect marine mammals 45 In 2006 the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration NOAA established a set of recommended vessel routes to reduce ship strikes in four important eastern US right whale habitats 46 In 2007 and again on June 1 2009 NOAA changed the TSS servicing Boston to reduce vessel collisions with right whales and other whale species 47 NOAA estimated that implementing an Area To Be Avoided ATBA and narrowing the TSS by 1 nautical mile 1 9 km would reduce the relative risk of right whale ship strikes by 74 during April July 63 from the ATBA and 11 from the narrowing of the TSS 48 In 2008 the National Marine Fisheries Service NMFS and NOAA enacted a series of vessel speed restrictions to reduce ship collisions with North Atlantic right whales for ships in certain areas along the East Coast of the United States in order to reduce the probability of fatal ship strikes Fishing gear entanglement Edit nbsp Disentanglement by NOAA staff off Jacksonville FloridaThe next greatest source of human induced mortality is entanglement in fixed fishing gear such as bottom set groundfish gillnet gear cod traps and lobster pots Between 1970 and October 2006 there have been 8 instances where entanglements have been the direct cause of death of North Atlantic right whales This represents 11 of all deaths documented during that period From 1986 to 2005 there were a total of 61 confirmed reports of entanglements including the aforementioned mortalities It is likely that official figures underestimate the actual impacts of entanglement It is believed that chronically entangled animals may in fact sink upon death due to loss of buoyancy from depleted blubber reserves and therefore escape detection 8 According to a 2012 New England Aquarium report 85 percent of the whales have had rope entanglement at least one time and it is the leading cause of death 49 A whale that survives an entanglement episode may be weakened have reduced fertility or become vulnerable to further injury Because whales often free themselves of gear following an entanglement event scarring may be a better indicator of fisheries interaction than entanglement sightings A 2012 analysis of the scarification of right whales over the years 1980 to 2009 showed that 82 9 of all North Atlantic right whales experienced at least one fishing gear entanglement 59 0 have had more than one such experience and an average of 15 5 of the population are entangled in fishing gear annually 50 In 2007 so as to protect northern right whales from serious injury or mortality from entanglement in gillnet gear in their calving area in Atlantic Ocean waters off the southeast United States the National Marine Fisheries Service NMFS revised regulations implementing the Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Plan ALWTRP This plan expands the restricted area to include the waters off of South Carolina Georgia and Northern Florida It also prohibits gillnet fishing or even gillnet possession in those waters for a period of five months beginning on November 15 of each year which coincides with the annual right whale calving season 51 When entanglement prevention efforts fail disentanglement efforts occasionally succeed despite the fact that such efforts are more frequently impossible or unsuccessful Nevertheless they do in fact make a significant difference because saving a few whales in a population of only 400 has a large positive effect against mortality rates During the period 2004 2008 there were at least four documented cases of entanglements for which the intervention of disentanglement teams averted a likely death of a right whale 35 For the first time in 2009 and again in 2011 scientists successfully used chemical sedation of an entangled whale to reduce stress on the animal and to reduce the time spent working with it After disentangling the whale scientists attached a satellite tracking tag administered a dose of antibiotics to treat entanglement wounds and then another drug to reverse the sedation 9 Despite concerns that the trauma might impair reproduction researchers confirmed in January 2013 that three disentangled whales had given birth 52 Due to recently increased presences of right whales in Cape Breton to St Lawrence regions increases in entanglements and possible ship strikes have been confirmed 53 54 55 as well including serious fatal cases 56 involving three whales between June 24 and July 13 2015 57 A female known as Snow Cone gained attention in September 2022 after being spotted off the coast of Massachusetts dragging fishing gear The 17 year old whale who had been continuously entangled for at least 18 months and was covered in lice and swimming slowly was considered beyond saving by scientists 58 In 2022 the Marine Stewardship Council revoked its certification for the commercial Gulf of Maine lobster fishery citing risks of entanglement of North American right whales in lobster fishing gear The same year Seafood Watch added the American and Canadian Maine lobster fisheries to its red list to seafood species to avoid for the same reason The MSC and Seafood Watch led some retailers to stop selling Maine lobster The decision was welcomed by whale conservation groups but opposed by the Maine lobster industry and elected officials in Maine where the fishery is economically important 59 Noise Edit See also noise pollution A 2011 analysis of data collected in the Bay of Fundy has shown that exposure to low frequency ship noise may be associated with chronic physiological stress in North Atlantic right whales 60 Naval training near calving grounds Edit The US Navy proposed plans to build a new undersea naval sonar training range immediately adjacent to northern right whale calving grounds in shallow waters off the Florida Georgia border In September 2012 legal challenges by 12 environmental groups were denied in federal court allowing the Navy to proceed 61 62 Climate change Edit Climate change poses a threat to the North Atlantic right whale as global temperatures increase and ocean processes change Long migratory periods gestations and time gaps between calves results in slow growing right whale populations 63 A brief change in food availability in particular Calanus finmarchicus can affect right whale populations for years after Females must have access to plenty of food to successfully make it through pregnancy and produce enough milk to rear a calf To illustrate the species sensitivity to food availability in 1998 zooplankton populations dropped dramatically following a climate shift Even though zooplankton abundance began to rise again in 1999 right whales have such a long reproduction and migratory cycle that the population was greatly affected by the minimal food availability from the year before In 1999 only one right whale calf was born compared to the 21 that were born in 1996 before the climate shift In 2001 after the zooplankton populations greatly recovered 30 calves were born 64 Zooplankton abundance has been found to be associated with the North Atlantic Oscillation NAO the most influential climate force in the Northern Hemisphere 65 Periodically pressure anomalies in the system shift from positive to negative as determined by the NAO Index affecting temperatures and wind patterns Abundant zooplankton populations have been linked to a positive NAO Index As global temperatures increase the NAO is predicted to shift more often and to greater intensities so called marine heatwaves 66 These shifts will likely greatly affect the abundance of zooplankton posing a great risk for right whale populations that cannot rapidly adapt to a new food source Climate change causes warming of the ocean and in turn changes ocean circulation patterns This changes the foraging patterns and habitat of the North Atlantic right whale reducing the population s calving rate and exposing it to greater mortality risks from ship strikes and fishing gear entanglement 67 2017 Unusual Mortality Event EditAs defined by the Marine Mammal Protection Act an Unusual Mortality Event UME demands immediate response and is characterized by a stranding that is unexpected or involves a significant die off of any marine mammal population In 2017 a UME began in the North Atlantic right whale population 2017 saw the population of under 400 suffer 17 deaths as a result of anthropogenic threats 12 in Canada 5 in the U S In 2018 there were 3 deaths attributed to anthropogenic threats and in 2019 another 10 were lost to such causes 9 of the deaths were attributed to vessel strikes and 8 to entanglement with the rest lacking a thorough examination to determine the cause of death The same time period 2017 2019 saw an additional 8 severely injured as in they were observed in a condition that would likely kill them within weeks to months 68 Population and distribution EditIt is not known how many populations of North Atlantic right whales existed prior to whaling but the majority of studies usually consider that there were historically two populations one each in the eastern and western North Atlantic There are however two other hypotheses which claim respectively one super population among the entire North Atlantic with mixing of eastern and western migratory routes occurring at locations in relatively high latitudes such as in the Denmark Strait and three sub populations of eastern western and central Atlantic right whales with the central stock ranging from Greenland s Cape Farewell in summer to the Azores Bermuda and Bahamas in winter 69 70 although recent study indicates that the Azores had probably been a migratory corridor rather than a wintering ground 71 Recent studies revealed that modern counterparts of the eastern and western populations are genetically much closer to each other than previously thought 72 Right whales habitat can be affected dramatically by climate changes along with Bowhead whales 73 Western population Edit nbsp Continuous callosities are visible which are distinctive to the Atlantic species nbsp Interacting with dolphinsIn spring summer and autumn the western North Atlantic population feeds in a range stretching from Massachusetts to Newfoundland 74 Particularly popular feeding areas are the Bay of Fundy the Gulf of Maine and Cape Cod Bay 75 In winter they head south towards Georgia and Florida to give birth According to census of individual whales identified using photo identification techniques the latest available stock assessment data August 2012 indicates that a minimum of 396 recognized individuals were known to be alive in the western North Atlantic in 2010 up from 361 in 2005 6 35 Distributions within other parts of Bay of Fundy is rather unknown although whales are occasionally observed at various locations in northern parts such as in Baxters Harbour 76 or at Campobello Island 77 Though their numbers are still scarce some right whales migrate regularly into the Gulf of St Lawrence notably around the Gaspe Peninsula 78 79 and in the Chaleur Bay 80 81 82 83 and up to Anticosti Island Tadoussac and in the St Lawrence River 84 85 86 such as at Rouge Island 87 Until 1994 whales were regarded as rather vagrant migrants into St Lawrence region however annual concentrations of whales were discovered off Perce in 1995 and sightings in entire St Lawrence regions have been shown gradual increases since in 1998 88 For example in the survey conducted by the Canadian Whale Institute in 2006 three whales were detected off the peninsula 89 Some whales including cow and calf pairs also appear around Cape Breton Island with notable increasing regularities in recent years notably since in 2014 and about 35 to 40 whales were confirmed around Prince Edward Island and Gaspe Peninsula in 2015 54 Further the whales regular range is known to reach up to off Newfoundland and the Labrador Sea and several have been found in a former whaling ground east of Greenland s southern tip 90 Parts of the western group especially for those seen regularly in the Gulf of St Lawrence display different migratory or calving routines than other whales and these are so called Offshore Whales There could be various areas along or off the west coasts where could have been frequented by whales potentially and might be re colonized in the future such as Quoddy Eastport 91 Plymouth Harbor 92 Sagamore Beach 93 Island of Nantucket Florida Bay Pamlico Sound Gulf of Mexico as far as to Texas 94 95 Bahamas Long Island Sound and vicinity to New York City 96 97 the mouth of Potomac River Delaware and Chesapeake Bay the mouth of Altamaha River 98 Cape Canaveral Sebastian Inlet and around Melbourne As the population grows it s also highly possible that more whales would start using rivers or river mouths shallow estuaries smaller inlets or bays Whales have already seen repeatedly at various of these such as Indian River Inlet 99 100 101 Delaware River 102 103 Cape Cod Canal 104 and Jacksonville Drum 105 In early 2009 scientists recorded a record number of births among the western North Atlantic population 39 new calves were recorded born off the Atlantic coast of Florida and Georgia Right whales for the first time in a long time are doing their part they re having the babies they re having record numbers of babies We need to be vigilant and still do our part to prevent the whales from being killed Monica Zani New England Aquarium Endangered right whales appear to be on the rebound CNN com 25 In contrast 2012 was the worst calving season since 2000 with only seven calves sighted and one of those was believed to have died This is significantly below the annual average of 20 calves per year over the last decade 6 As the gestation period for right whales is a year long researchers believe that a lack of food in the whales summer feeding grounds in the Bay of Fundy during the summer of 2010 may be linked to the poor season in 2012 106 The right whale was purported to have reached a population of 500 in the North Atlantic which was assumed to have been achieved for the first time in centuries when counted in 2013 107 The population of the whale has been increasing at about 2 5 percent per year but this is below the optimal goal of 6 or 7 percent that researchers were hoping to attain 107 There were 411 of these animals left in 2019 when calves were born after a barren 2018 108 As of 2021 the population is estimated to be down to 350 whales 109 Aerial and shipboard surveys are conducted annually to locate and record seasonal distribution of North Atlantic right whales along the northeast and southeast United States coast Researchers identify individual right whales document whale behavior monitor new calves and respond to entangled whales 110 The surveys have been used to produce seasonal maps showing the density of right whales number of animals per square kilometer throughout the U S east coast and Nova Scotia 111 NOAA Fisheries maintains an interactive map of recent right whale sightings Eastern population Edit In the eastern North Atlantic the right whale population probably numbers in the low double digits at best with little information known about their distribution and migration pattern Scientists believe that this population may be functionally extinct 6 The last catch occurred in February 1967 from a pod of three animals including a cow calf pair one escaped in Madeira and one was taken in the Azores 112 Cintra Bay 113 and Bahia Gorrei 114 about 150 kilometers south of Villa Cisneros in the Western Sahara the only known historical calving ground for this group host no animals or if any then likely very few nowadays holding a situation similar to the Bay of Biscay area where many whales once congregated throughout years Although there were several sightings in the late 20th century see Bay of Biscay and catch records indicate whales historically used the bay for both feeding and wintering it is still unclear whether or not the Biscayne coasts were ever used as calving grounds Other parts of coastlines or oceanic islands from Iberian Peninsula and Portugal to Morocco in north to south possibly reaching even Mauritania to Senegal 115 Locations such as Dakhla Peninsula and Bay of Arguin had been served potentially as wintering grounds similar to the Cintra and Gorrei Bays region Historic presence of any summering or wintering grounds within the Mediterranean Basin including Black and Azov Sea is unknown although it has been considered to be feasible 116 Entire European regions including French coasts Hebrides North and Baltic Seas and further north up to Swedish and Norwegian areas were once ranged by whales Phenology of catch records in the early twentieth century in Nordic countries shows that whale presences in northern waters was at peak in June 112 In Ireland catches were concentrated in the first half of June until 1930s and preceded catch in the Scottish bases of the Hebrides 117 which were concentrated in the second half of June and July and this indicates that those whales were likely to migrate along Irish coasts Of all modern whaling grounds in European waters Hebrides and the Shetland Islands were the center of whaling in the early 20th century and any records afterwards these catches became scarce in eastern Atlantic where only two cow calf pairs had been documented 112 Any calm waters in north such as Porth Neigwl the Wadden Sea region 118 Cornwall coasts Moray Firth and in Irish Sea 119 could have been migratory colliders feeding or resting grounds or seasonal habitats to stay for less migrating or resident fully or partially individuals Some might have reached to entrance of Baltic Sea and northern Scandinavian Based on historical records Scandinavian waters once had been a potential feeding area 119 and this idea corresponds with behaviors of the below mentioned vagrant individual Porter 120 recorded in 1999 when he stayed in the fjord for several weeks indicating the area provided to him a feasible condition for summering Historical records suggest that summering grounds could have reached further north to northern coasts of Scandinavian Peninsula and some might have turned up at the mouth of Hudson Bay 121 Predicted summering range models suggest that small numbers of right whales could have been present year round in the Mediterranean Sea although it is unclear whether whales ever penetrated Turkish Straits to Marmara Black and Azov Seas historical presences at northern Aegean Sea were considered in this study which didn t include the northernmost basins in study areas 122 Sightings and confirmations in recent years Edit nbsp The last whale killed in OrioThere have been a few sightings further east over the past few decades with several sightings close to Iceland in 2003 There was speculation that these could be the remains of a virtually extinct Eastern Atlantic stock but examination of old whalers records suggest that they are more likely to be strays from further west 31 A few have been sighted in waters adjacent to Norway two documented sightings in 1926 and 1999 Ireland 123 124 shelf waters west of Scotland 125 Irish Sea 119 the Bay of Biscay in Spain off the Iberian Peninsula a cow calf pair at Cape St Vincent in Portugal and continuous sightings of a single animal off the southwestern Tenerife in the Canary Islands in 1995 Subsequently there have been two more sightings in Benderlau La Gomera and some other observations were reported in Portugal and Galicia A whale of unknown species thought to be a right whale was seen off Steenbanken Schouwen Duiveland Netherlands in July 2005 and was possibly the same animal previously seen off Texel in the West Frisian Islands 126 Another possible sighting was made along Lizard Point Cornwall in May 2012 127 Few recent sightings have also been recorded from pelagic waters such as off Hebrides 128 and on Rockall Basin 129 as late as in 2000s Right whales have also on rare occasion been observed in the Mediterranean Sea 116 Since the two records of a stranding Italy and a capture of one of a pair seen Algeria in early 20th century one sighting recorded in Dutch sighting scheme possibly between 1954 and 1957 112 only one possible sighting have been confirmed In May 1991 a petty officer of the Italian Navy happened to be in the water with his camera about 13 km 8 1 mi off the small island of Sant Antioco southwestern Sardinia when a right whale happened to swim by 130 his photos comprise the only confirmed sighting in the 20th century on the other hand however reliability of the record have been questioned due to failures to contact the photographers Earlier known occurrences of right whales in the basin include the stranding of a juvenile near Taranto southeastern Italy in 1877 and the sighting of two one of which was later captured in the bay of Castiglione Algiers in 1888 131 132 and Portugal 133 The Norway sightings appear to be of vagrants or strays from the western Atlantic stock 134 Catch records at Cape Verde Islands in spring summer seasons are highly doubtful 69 Below is a list of some of recent records of right whales in eastern North Atlantic not all of above mentioned records and excluding vagrant records according to the Spanish edition of this article Records and confirmations close to Newfoundland Iceland and Cape Farewell are also excluded Year Location Type of record Notes1805 Hondarribia Capture1854 San Sebastian Capture1878 Getaria Gipuzkoa Capture1893 San Sebastian Capture1901 Orio Capture 135 1914 Azores Capture failed 112 Prior to 1930 Off the coast of Porto Capture 136 Between 1939 and 1949 Capelinhos Faial Island Observation 112 Between 1954 and 1957 Mediterranean Sea Observation 112 January 1959 Madeira Capture pregnant female 137 112 1959 1966 Cape Clear Island Ireland 5 separate observations 112 1964 Off Cork Ireland Observation uncertain being included in above records 138 February 1967 Madeira Capture 139 August 1970 Cape Clear Island Ireland Observation 37 112 1977 or 1978 September Cape Finisterre Galicia 43 00 N 10 30 W 43 000 N 10 500 W 43 000 10 500 Observation 30 June 1980 Bay of Biscay Observation two whales 112 July October 1980 Between Harris and St Kilda Scotland Observation 112 Second half of 20th century Dutch coast Bones found 140 July 1987 Mid Atlantic off Iceland Observation 123 1987 Mid Atlantic off Spain Observation 138 1993 Near A Coruna Estaca de Bares Galicia Land based observation breaching individual 141 1995 Cape St Vincent Portugal Observation the only cow calf pair in recent times 133 Channel between Tenerife and La Gomera Observation 131 La Gomera Two separate observations 142 Channel between Tenerife and Gran Canaria ObservationBetween Punta de Teno and Punta Scratch Observation 133 143 Between June 1998 and January 1999 La Gomera Observation 144 1990s or 2000s Off Donegal Two observations 145 May 2000 Hatton Bank off Ireland and Britain Observation 123 July 2000 Off northern Shetland Islands Observation unclear if duplicate of above 146 2012 Lizard Point Cornwall possibly previously encountered by a kayaker in nearby areas Possible observations 127 A male accompanied a cow calf and only the male fledVagrants from the Western Population Edit Some eastern sightings have been officially confirmed to be of vagrants from the western population A right whale seen off Cape Cod in May 1999 was later seen in the Kvaenangen fjord in Troms Northern Norway in September 1999 This individual was later confirmed to be Porter an adult male in the catalog No 1133 He was seen again back in Cape Cod in winter 2000 having traveled for over 7 120 miles 11 460 km making this the longest ever traveling record of right whales 147 148 The area vicinity to Scandinavian Peninsula was once in the historical North Cape Ground one of the major whaling grounds for this species in the 17th century In January 2009 one animal was sighted off Pico Island Azores the first confirmed appearance there since 1888 This animal was later identified as a female from the western Atlantic group and nicknamed as Pico according to this event 149 Some individuals are known to show interesting patterns of movements which may possibly help researchers to deepen understandings of future re colonization to eastern Atlantic if possible 150 Possible central population Edit Several biologists have mentioned the possibility that a third population exists which ranges from near Iceland or Greenland in the north to Bermuda or the Bahamas in the south 69 Some right whales are now said to live primarily in Icelandic waters occasionally joining up with the western population 151 In July 2003 a research team from the New England Aquarium investigated the possibility of right whales inhabiting the Cape Farewell region They recorded a sighting of a female right whale in the Irminger Sea southwest of the Iceland coast She was later named Hidalgo due to a scar mark on her head resembling a horse 152 In 2009 right whales appeared in waters around Greenland 153 although their origin was not confirmed 154 Prior to this no right whales had been killed or confirmed present off the coast of Greenland for around 200 years 155 except for the sighting of 1718 a unique animal seen only twice off Cape Farewell in July 1987 and at the Nova Scotian Shelf in June 1989 Several sightings in the area made in the 1970s may or may not be of right whales as the critically endangered population of Bowhead whales are also present in the area For southward migration the sighting of two whales displaying courtship behaviors in the Bermuda was recorded by a team of researchers including Roger Payne in April 1970 69 Conservation status Edit nbsp Reconstruction of a North Atlantic right whale nbsp West Edmonton Mall s North Atlantic right whale bronze statue Open Sea In the United States this species is listed as endangered by the NMFS under the Endangered Species Act 156 It is also listed as depleted under the Marine Mammal Protection Act 157 In Canada the species is federally protected under the Species at Risk Act SARA 158 Since entanglement in floating gear accounted for 82 of documented right whale deaths in 2022 159 the Canadian Wildlife Federation has been providing ropeless equipment to snow crab fishers in and around the Gulf of St Lawrence 160 On a global level the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals CMS or the Bonn Convention is a multilateral treaty specializing in the conservation of migratory species their habitats and migration routes CMS has listed the North Atlantic right whale on Appendix I which identifies it as a migratory species threatened with extinction 161 This obligates member nations to strive towards strict protection of these animals habitat conservation or restoration mitigation of obstacles to migration and control of other factors that might endanger them citation needed Additionally CMS encourages concerted action among the range states of many Appendix I species 162 To that end a small portion of the eastern Atlantic population s range is covered by the Agreement on the Conservation of Cetaceans in the Black Sea Mediterranean Sea and Contiguous Atlantic Area ACCOBAMS 163 The Atlantic area bounded on the west by a line running from Cape St Vincent in southwest Portugal to Casablanca Morocco and on the east by the Strait of Gibraltar Another multilateral treaty the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora CITES or the Washington Convention also lists the North Atlantic right whale on its own Appendix I Being so listed prohibits international trade import or export in specimens of this species or any derivative products e g food or drug products bones trophies except for scientific research and other exceptional cases with a permit specific to that specimen 3 Whale watching Edit nbsp Curious whale lifting head showing distinctive callosities to observers on boatsEither land based or organized whale watching activities are available along east coasts from Canada in north to Virginia North Carolina Georgia Florida to south Stellwagen Bank Sanctuary has also been designated for watching this species Onlookers lucky enough can spot them from shores time to time on whales migration seasons especially for feeding vicinity to Cape Cod such as at Race Point and Brier Island and breeding calving off Georgia to Florida coasts when whales strongly approach shores or enters rivers or estuaries such as at Outer Banks Pamlico Sound Indian River Inlet Cape Lookout Virginia Beach Virginia Golden Isles of Georgia beaches on Florida e g most notably at Flagler Jacksonville St Augustine Ponte Vedra Satellite Crescent and Cocoa and any others like Ormond New Smyrna South Melbourne Wrightsville Vero Boynton and so on There are some piers used for lookout points such as at Jacksonville and Wrightsville With their low profile on the water right whales can be difficult to spot so all fishermen and boaters transiting through potential right whale habitat should keep a sharp lookout Boaters should be advised that NOAA Fisheries has a 500 yard rule prohibiting anyone from approaching within 500 yards 1 500 ft 460 m of a North Atlantic right whale 164 The regulations include all boaters fishing vessels except commercial fishing vessel retrieving gear kayakers surfers and paddleboarders 165 and agencies such as the United States Coast Guard and the Massachusetts Environmental Police have been authorized to enforce it 166 Right whale sightings can be valuable to researchers who recommend all sightings be reported 167 In Florida the Marine Resources Council maintains a volunteer sighting network to receive sighting information from the public and verify sightings with trained volunteers 168 Due to the species status as of 2014 there is no whale watching location in eastern and mid Atlantic and oceanic islands feasible to observe right whales regularly Among these only off Iceland right whales have been encountered during watching tours save for expeditions and land based observations targeting for birds and other faunas and several observations were made in Iceland during the 2000s See also Edit nbsp Cetaceans portal nbsp Mammals portal nbsp Marine life portalList of Georgia state symbols List of South Carolina state symbols List of mammals of Massachusetts Right whale is the State Marine Animal List of mammals of Georgia U S state List of marine mammal species List of cetaceans Moira BrownReferences Edit a b Mead J G Brownell R L Jr 2005 Order Cetacea In Wilson D E Reeder D M eds Mammal Species of the World A Taxonomic and Geographic Reference 3rd ed Johns Hopkins University Press pp 723 743 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 OCLC 62265494 a b c d Cooke J G 2020 errata version of 2020 assessment Eubalaena glacialis IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T41712A178589687 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 2 RLTS T41712A178589687 en Retrieved 28 March 2021 a b Appendices I II and III Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora CITES 15 September 2012 Retrieved 20 January 2013 ITIS Standard Report Eubalaena glacialis Muller 1776 ITIS on line database Integrated Taxonomic Information System Retrieved 6 September 2012 Perrin W F 2012 Eubalaena glacialis Muller 1776 World Cetacea Database Retrieved 29 September 2012 a b c d e North Atlantic right whale Eubalaena glacialis 5 year review Summary and Evaluation PDF Gloucester MA National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries Service August 2012 Retrieved 9 December 2012 The western North Atlantic population numbered at least 361 individuals in 2005 and at least 396 in 2010 Waring et al 2012 Writer Rachel OhmStaff 2020 10 26 Estimate shows 11 decline in North Atlantic right whale population in a year Press Herald Retrieved 2020 10 27 a b c d e Fisheries amp Oceans Canada 2007 Recovery potential assessment for right whale Western North Atlantic population PDF Canadian Science Advisory Secretariat Science Advisory Report 2007 027 Retrieved 17 June 2011 a b National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 2011 01 23 Scientists Successfully Use Sedation to Help Disentangle North Atlantic Right Whale ScienceDaily Retrieved 2011 01 27 Taylor S Walker T R 2017 North Atlantic right whales in danger Science 358 6364 730 731 Bibcode 2017Sci 358 730T doi 10 1126 science aar2402 PMID 29123056 S2CID 38041766 Government of Canada Fisheries and Oceans Canada 2019 06 13 North Atlantic Right Whale www dfo mpo gc ca Retrieved 2019 11 28 a b Fisheries NOAA 2019 10 17 North Atlantic Right Whale NOAA Fisheries www fisheries noaa gov Retrieved 2019 11 28 a b What is the function of the callosities in right whales Whales online Baleines en direct 2017 06 30 Retrieved 2019 11 28 Pettis Heather M Rolland Rosalind M Hamilton 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2011 08 13 Retrieved 2006 10 26 Nores C Pis Millan J A 2001 Determinacion de la escapula de ballena encontrada en la Campa Torres El Castro de la Campa Torres Ayuntamiento de Gijon Teixeira A M A P 1979 Marine mammals of the Portuguese coast Zeitschrift fur Saugetierkunde 44 221 238 Freitas L Dinis A Nicolau C Ribeiro C Alves F 2012 New Records of Cetacean Species for Madeira Archipelago with an Updated Checklist PDF Boletim Museo Municipal Funchal Madeira Whale Museum 62 334 25 43 Retrieved 2015 03 08 a b in French North Atlantic right whale recent summer records outside main grounds Morse Project Maul and Sergeant 1977 Kompanje E J O Smeenk C 1996 Recent bones of right whales Eubalaena glacialis from the southern North Sea Lutra 39 2 66 75 Arcos F Mosquera I 1993 Observacion d un exemplar de baleabasca Eubalaena glacialis en Galicia Eubalaena 3 21 25 Benderlau s a Aguilar 1999 Ritter Fabian 2001 21 cetacean species off La Gomera Canary Islands Possible reasons for an extraordinary species diversity PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 10 07 Retrieved 2016 02 03 Northern Right Whale Irish Whale and Dolphin Group IWDG Photo cards 2 Sea Watch Foundation Porter s Biography Archived 2013 10 05 at the Wayback Machine New England Aquarium Website Habitats Migration Mystery Archived 2013 10 22 at the Wayback Machine The North Atlantic Right Whale Consortium Website First North Atlantic right whale sighting in Azores since 1888 WildlifeExtra com North Atlantic Right Whale Consortium 1997 Are there right whales in the eastern North Atlantic Right Whale News permanent dead link Volume 4 No 1412 s Biography New England Aquarium Homepage Archived from the original on 2013 10 21 Whale Facts Migration Right Whale Ca Canadian Whale Institute Archived from the original on 2013 10 22 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration May 20 2009 NOAA Expedition Hears Endangered North Atlantic Right Whales off Greenland Newman Dennis May 20 2009 OSU Researchers Discover Extinct Whales Natural Oregon Archived from the original on May 27 2009 SaraJean 2009 05 25 Greenland New Home for Right Whales Retrieved 2009 12 29 PROTECTING THE LAST OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC RIGHT WHALES WDC Retrieved 9 January 2018 North Atlantic Right Whale Marine Mammal Commission Retrieved 9 January 2018 Error MacDonald Michael Progress being made in fight to save North Atlantic right whale from extinction CP24 com Retrieved 16 January 2023 MacDonald Michael Progress being made in fight to save North Atlantic right whale from extinction CP24 com Retrieved 16 January 2023 Appendices I and II PDF Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals CMS Amended by the Conference of the Parties in 1985 1988 1991 1994 1997 1999 2002 2005 2008 and 2011 2012 p 1 Archived from the original PDF on November 14 2012 Retrieved February 20 2013 CMS Retrieved 14 May 2015 Accobams News Retrieved 14 May 2015 Look Out for Right Whales NOAA Fisheries Depra Dianne 16 March 2015 Florida Beach Goers Urged to Keep Away From Right Whales Tech Times State Officials Urge Boaters to Use Extreme Caution in Cape Cod Bay Due to the Presence of Endangered Right Whales Mass gov Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries 2017 04 18 Retrieved 2017 10 24 PSB Sighting Advisory System 11 February 2021 North Atlantic Right Whale Program Archived 2017 10 27 at the Wayback Machine Marine Resources Council External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eubalaena glacialis nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Eubalaena glacialis North Atlantic Right Whale Consortium North Atlantic Right Whale Research at the New England Aquarium Digital North Atlantic Right Whale Catalog by New England Aquarium North Atlantic Right Whale species information at the Smithsonian Ocean Portal NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service North Atlantic Right Whale Hear right whale audio U of R I Office of Marine Programs Watch video of northern right whales Provincetown Center for Coastal Studies Whale Rescue Disentanglement Right Whale Listening Network has acoustic autobuoys in between the lanes of the Traffic Separation Scheme approaching Boston Smithsonian Institution North American Mammals Eubalaena glacialis Voices in the Sea Sounds of the North Atlantic Right Whale The MORSE project North Atlantic right whale recent summer records outside main grounds Humans pushing North Atlantic right whale to extinction faster than believed The Guardian October 30 2020 Animal activists say Senate omnibus bill condemns right whale to extinction The Guardian December 1 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title North Atlantic right whale amp oldid 1179295155, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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