B4 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JUNE 8, 2021 Endangered right whales are shrinking By EVE ZUCKOFF WCAI North Atlantic right whales now grow smaller than they did 40 years ago, and new research suggests a leading cause is the damage human activity infl icts on the critically endangered mammals. The fi ndings, published last week in the journal Current Biology, reveal that when fully grown, a North Atlantic right whale born today would be expected to be about 1 meter shorter than a whale born in 1980. Full-grown members of the species aver- age 43 to 46 feet. “The fi rst inkling that we had came from the folks who were collecting the data in the fi eld, where, as the story goes, they saw what looked to be a really young whale, a calf, or maybe 1- or 2-year-old,” said Joshua Stewart, a postdoctoral researcher with the National Oceanic and Atmo- spheric Administration’s Marine Mam- mal and Turtle Division and lead author of the new study. “But it turns out that they were actually 5-year-old or 10-year- old whales that were smaller than a typical 2-year-old.” The researchers used high-resolution aerial photographs to track size and body condition over time of 129 right whales. There are only about 366 North Atlantic right whales in existence now, compared to 481 in 2011, the known high for the popu- lation in recent years. Their numbers were much higher before commercial whaling brought them to the brink of extinction by the early 1890s. The mammals’ high fat content and buoyancy after death led to their name: whalers called them the “right whales” to kill. The research, with contributions from scientists with the New England Aquar- ium, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institu- tion and Oregon State University, indicated that a prime reason for the animals’ recent stunted growth is entanglement in rope and fi shing gear. North Atlantic right whales typically migrate up and down the eastern seaboard, from Florida to Canada. In recent years, more than half the population can be found from late winter to early spring off the coast of Cape Cod, where they navigate a deadly maze of rope and lobster fi shing gear. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Scientists from NOAA Fisheries Service approach a young North Atlantic right whale in order to disentangle it. New research shows whales with severe entanglements in rope and fi shing gear are experiencing stunted growth, and body lengths have been decreasing since 1981. Entanglements in the gear can lead to fatal infections, starvation or drown- ing. But even when they don’t kill the whales, they can cause long-term harm, the researchers found. When the mam- mals get caught in human detritus and end up dragging it around, it forces them to expend more energy fi ghting to sur- vive, instead of growing or repopulating their dwindling species. “You can imagine if you had a sand- bag tied to you and you had to go about your daily business, you’d be burning a lot of extra energy just dragging that sandbag around,” Stewart said. Not only does entanglement con- tribute to reduced body size for an indi- vidual whale, but female North Atlan- tic right whales entangled while nursing produce smaller calves. That threatens the repopulation of a species with so few remaining members. “This is a fi nding that adds to the grim tale of the right whale,” said Charles “Stormy” Mayo, director of the North Atlantic Right Whale Ecol- ogy Program at the Center for Coastal Studies in Provincetown, Massachu- setts, who did not contribute to the new research. “It’s an extremely important piece of work because it demonstrates not only what we always knew, and that is that entanglement causes death. But in this case, it goes beyond that and con- fi rms what some of the authors have long suspected.” The stunted growth of the whales coincides with an increasing rate of entanglements. A 2012 study from the New England Aquarium revealed that more than 80% of right whales have been entangled at least once in their lives and 60% have been entangled more than twice. “We know from other species of whales, including really closely related southern right whales, that in the case of moms, when you’re giving birth, if you’re smaller and skinnier, then your calf is also likely to be smaller and skin- nier,” Stewart said. “Especially as a calf, you’re needing to grow really quickly in those early years, so you could have a lower chance of survival if you’re smaller.” He added: “We also think that if you’re shorter, you can’t pack on as much of an energetic reserve as a longer whale can. Their gas tank is smaller, and so that means that if you deplete a lot of that reserve when you’re, let’s say, nurs- ing a calf ... you might have to wait lon- ger between pregnancies.” Researchers acknowledge that entanglements do not explain all of the reduced growth. Other factors might be climate change, collisions and noise from ships, and the shifting availabil- ity of tiny crustaceans called copepods, their primary food source. Researchers are now trying to estab- lish whether other, less-studied large whale species and marine mammals are suff ering from similar declines in growth. In response, conservationists say fi sh- eries managers need to better regulate the crab and lobster fi sheries, whose ver- tical lines to traps on the seafl oor are con- sidered the primary culprit in entangle- ments. One potential answer is greater investment in the development and test- ing of ropeless fi shing technology. Representatives of the lobster indus- try say they have been unfairly blamed for entanglements and insist that more research is needed to determine the source of gear found wrapped around these whales before further regulation drives them out of business. Researchers, however, say there is no time to wait. “We are in a very deep hole with right whales,” Mayo said. “Really, the species can’t tolerate any further impacts or its future really is sealed.” Classifieds S SELL E ELL L L YOUR Y O U R V VEHICLE E EHIC H I C L LE E HERE! H E R E ! HERE GARAGE SALE If it Drives or Floats... SEASON IS HERE! ONLY $ 49.95 ADVE ADVERTISE VERTIS ISE E TODAY TODA TO AY 800.781.3214 classifieds@dailyastorian.com If it doesn’t sell in two weeks We will give you two weeks for FREE! Searching for Employees? PLA YOUR JOB PLACE POSTING HERE POST $ 25 Special Includes: • 2 Weeks in Print & Online • Logo Included • Facebook Boost • Featured Advertising ys for 3 da Call 800.781.3214 to advertise today! classifieds@dailyastorian.com Call at 503-325-3211 or email: classifieds@dailyastorian.com 651 Help Wanted 651 Help Wanted 651 Help Wanted Camp 18 is hiring for all positions! 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