A10 THE ASTORIAN • THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 2021 Team encounters whales off the Oregon Coast Simon Ager/Sea Shepherd Conservation Society A beaked whale is seen near Baja California, Mexico. By JES BURNS Oregon Public Broadcasting Engine trouble can be a real drag. Especially when you’re just a few days into a weeklong journey to the Great Pacifi c Garbage Patch in search of elusive beaked whales. So when the Oregon State Uni- versity research mission aboard the R/V Pacifi c Storm had to turn around in the middle of the ocean and head back to Newport, there was a fair amount of disappoint- ment on board. “It was very clear that we were not going to be able to keep the expedition as planned. We needed to change things up,” research leader Lisa Ballance said. Beaked whales are some of the shyest marine mammals around. They often spend their time far away from land, hunting in the deep open ocean. They look like longer, chubbier dolphins. Six known spe- cies have never been seen alive. Scientists only know about their existence because they’ve been found dead. Ballance and her team were on the trail of what they thought could be a totally new species that had been sighted, but not identifi ed, near the garbage patch. But with more than half their time being eaten up by engine repairs and other delays, the team made the call to look for whales a bit closer to home. “We know in the seas … right off of Oregon, there are beaked whale mysteries,” said Ballance, director of Oregon State’s Marine Mammal Institute. “And I’ll be darned if we didn’t have an abso- lutely remarkable encounter …. I still cannot believe it.” The Pacifi c Storm was about 200 miles off the northern Ore- gon Coast when audio special- ist Annamaria DeAngelis picked something up while listening through a hydrophone towed behind the ship. It was the sounds of beaked whale echolocation. There’s no light in the deep water where the whales hunt, so they use sound to locate squid, which is thought to be their main prey. It’s similar to the method used by bats. The sound is so high-pitched that humans can’t hear it, but the instruments can. And DeAnge- lis didn’t recognize what whale that particular acoustic signature belonged to. And then the signal stopped. The team knew that meant the whales were on their way to the surface to breathe. The research crew all rushed to the deck. The seas were rough and the wind high, diffi cult conditions to spot any whale. An hour passed. Then, they got lucky. Two whales appeared. “Amazingly, they were what I would call curious. They stayed with the ship. We pointed the ship and went down-swell. And so did they …. And we got great looks at them,” Ballance said. The whales swam so close to the Pacifi c Storm that the crew was able to collect a small sam- ple of skin with a crossbow-fi red biopsy dart. That skin sample was key to positively identifying them as Hubbs’ beaked whales. The Hubbs’ beaked whale was fi rst discovered dead and washed up on shore in the 1940s in South- ern California. Ballance says a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration science team observed the species alive off the coast of Oregon in the mid-1990s, but as far as she knows, none had been sighted alive since. But more important scientifi - cally than the sighting of Hubbs’ beaked whales was the audio recording they captured. For the fi rst time, researchers were able to positively match the Hubbs’ to its song. “Linking the acoustic call with a visual description of a poorly known whale — and confi rming the species identifi cation through genetics — is an extremely power- ful tool. Because instantly we know the animal occurs everywhere that call has been recorded,” she said. Now the task for the team is to fi nd where that call has been recorded before so they can start to get a sense of their range. The team hopes to publish a paper with their results next year. “It was such an unlikely event to happen, especially on the heels of what we were sort of thinking was a largely failed expedition … It was an absolutely extraordinary win.” CL ASSIF IE D M ARK ETPL A CE P lace classified ad s o n lin e at w w w .d ailyasto rian .co m o r call503-325-3211 204 Automobiles GARAGE SALES Garage Sale 615 Lake St. Ilwaco, Wa. 98624 10/29, 10/30/21 9am to 4pm Whirlpool washer and dryer, twin bed with frame, nice furniture, framed art and mirrors, home office furniture, home decor, garage shelving, designer women’s clothing. State mandated Covid requirements in place. Sign up sheet available onsite at 8am. Strange Estate Sales A small town newspaper with a global outlook Position: Code Enforcement Officer Go. Do. 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