A3 THE ASTORIAN • TUESDAY, JANUARY 4, 2022 Research team studies whale features, survival By ALLAYANA DARROW Mail Tribune A new website created by researchers at Oregon State University brings the reali- ties of life undersea to the surface, off er- ing a chance for the public to virtually meet whales that have survived propeller injuries, fi shing gear entanglements and changes in prey availability due to shifting ocean conditions. The website, individuwhale.com, cov- ers ongoing research, information about gray whales and stressors the animals face due to human activity. Descriptions of each whale include dis- tinguishing features, length of time in observation, feeding habits, birth, health history and body condition. You can meet “Scarlett,” a Pacifi c Northwest resident since the mid-1990s, or “Buttons,” a cha- meleon of the sea. These whales gained their nicknames from researchers in the Geospatial Ecology of Marine Megafauna Laboratory at the Oregon State Marine Mammal Institute. The team has cataloged nearly 200 whales in the Pacifi c Coast Feeding Group with unique names and identifi cation numbers. “We wanted to share with Oregonians, and the public in general, the stories of these whales because they are residents of Oregon like us, and they have personali- ties and stories to tell,” said lead researcher Leigh Torres. The majority of gray whales in the east- ern north Pacifi c traverse the Oregon Coast on their winter migration route to Mexico’s breeding grounds, before turning north in March to fi nd summer feeding grounds between Alaska and Russia. The research team studies a population of gray whales that sticks around the West Coast in the summer months, known as the Pacifi c Coast Feeding Group. Torres and the research team have con- ducted annual health exams and research on the population since 2016. Boats and drones are used to spot whales, then researchers collect fecal sam- ples in their wake, which can be analyzed for reproduction and stress markers. Drone images allow for documentation of body condition and behavior. Among the featured whales: “Sole,” fi rst sighted in 1999, always returns to a 3.2-mile area around Newport and Depoe Bay. “This is an incredible level of site fi del- ity for an animal that can migrate 20,000 (kilometers) in a year,” according to Sole’s IndividuWhale profi le. “It’s amazing how reliably we found Sole in her ‘predictable patch of the ocean,’ where most of the time Oregon State University Marine Mammal Institute The Oregon resident gray whale ‘Scarlett’ is seen here with her calf ‘Rose’ on her back. ‘WE WANT PEOPLE TO UNDERSTAND THE CONNECTION BETWEEN THEIR BEHAVIOR AND THESE INDIVIDUAL WHALES. WE’RE TRYING TO REACH THOSE EVERYDAY OCEAN USERS. IF EVERYONE CHANGES ONE BEHAVIOR, LIKE SLOWING DOWN WHILE BOATING NEAR THE REEFS WHERE GRAY WHALES FEED, REDUCING USE OF PLASTICS THAT POLLUTE THE OCEAN AND REMOVING RECREATIONAL CRABBING GEAR PROMPTLY SO ANIMALS DON’T GET TANGLED IN IT, THESE ARE ALL THINGS THAT CAN MAKE A HUGE DIFFERENCE.’ Leigh Torres | lead researcher we see her foraging, so she must like the prey on the menu here and be very good at catching it.” “Roller Skate,” fi rst identifi ed as a calf in 2015, was spotted four years later with fi shing line tangled around her fl uke. In 2020, she was found diving a bit dif- ferently, having survived a “very gnarly embedded wound, and part of her fl uke was eff ectively amputated,” said doctoral student Lisa Hildebrand. With the website, the research team hopes to educate the public about threats facing the state’s gray whale population. Happy New Year One featured whale, “Zorro,” was once a regular in the group, but has not been spot- ted in 2021, according to the research team. Responding to a decline in the num- ber of whales observed each summer in the Oregon study area, the research team investigates feeding strategies in certain habitats, and the connection between a decline in kelp density and decreased prey availability. In Port Orford, the team collects data on kelp health, urchin density, zooplankton and gray whale foraging. Over the past six years, the team documented a “coincident and dramatic increase in urchin density and decline in kelp health,” and decreased zoo- plankton prey and whale foraging. “We want people to understand the con- nection between their behavior and these individual whales,” Torres said. “We’re trying to reach those everyday ocean users. If everyone changes one behavior, like slowing down while boating near the reefs where gray whales feed, reducing use of plastics that pollute the ocean and remov- ing recreational crabbing gear promptly so animals don’t get tangled in it, these are all things that can make a huge diff erence.” Thanks for your support! Coast Chapter Chapter of of ABATE ABATE Oregon, Inc. The North North Coast of of Oregon, Inc. sincerely wishes to thank the following contributors and supporters of our 2021 events, your generous support will result in providing assistance for the local Food Bank Programs supporting families in Clatsop County that need the assistance to put food on the table and more, we so greatly appreciate your caring support!!! Former Senator Betsy Johnson, Scappoose Bowpicker Fish & Chips, Astoria Del Thompson, former owner of OK Rubber Welders. Klyde Thompson, owner of Del’s OK Tire Point S Tire and Auto Service, uses Nokian All-Weather Tires on his personal vehicles. 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