Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Dolphin Sighting South Of Victoria Could Signal Warmer Oceans: U.S. Group

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jun, 2016 12:14 PM
    SEATTLE — A Seattle-based ecotourism group says the effects of global warming may be responsible for a unique sighting in the usually chilly northwest coast waters of the Salish Sea, south of Victoria.
     
    The Pacific Whale Watch Association says people aboard a whale watching expedition off Port Angeles, Wash., on Saturday saw a small school of what are believed to be short-beaked common dolphins.
     
    The dolphins rarely venture north of California, and a naturalist aboard the expedition snapped a photo when she realized the creatures were not their Pacific white-sided cousins, found along the Washington state and B.C. coasts.
     
    If the school is confirmed, association officials say it could be the first-ever sighting of the speedy mammals in the Salish Sea, around the southern tip of Vancouver Island.
     
    The association says a number of short-beaked common dolphins were spotted off the B.C. coast last September, but those two schools were about 75 kilometres southwest of Vancouver Island near the continental shelf.
     
    Executive director Michael Harris says that while whale-watching crews are enthusiastic about rare sightings, members believe the unexpected arrivals are likely linked to warmer ocean temperatures.
     
    "They're beautiful animals and we're thrilled to get a chance to observe and study them, but at the same time we know that if our oceans were healthier and this planet weren't in the throes of a climate crisis we probably wouldn't be seeing this species up here," Harris says.
     
    Short-beaked common dolphins can grow to 2.5 metres and reach speeds of up to 60 kilometres per hour, making them among the fastest animals in the ocean.
     
    The association reports growing numbers of unique sightings, including the endangered north Pacific right whale. A sub-tropical green sea turtle was nursed back to health at the Vancouver Aquarium after being washed ashore on Vancouver Island's west coast in January.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Cabinet Minister Ted Mcmeekin Stepping Down For Gender Parity

    Ontario Cabinet Minister Ted Mcmeekin Stepping Down For Gender Parity
    Ted McMeekin wrote in a Facebook post Monday that he will continue to serve as minister until Premier Kathleen Wynne names a replacement.

    Ontario Cabinet Minister Ted Mcmeekin Stepping Down For Gender Parity

    Jury Hears Love Triangle Led To Shooting Death Of Salmon Arm, B.C., Man

    Jury Hears Love Triangle Led To Shooting Death Of Salmon Arm, B.C., Man
    A 24-year-old Salmon Arm man is on trial in B.C. Supreme Court, charged with first-degree murder in the death of Tyler Myers in November 2008.

    Jury Hears Love Triangle Led To Shooting Death Of Salmon Arm, B.C., Man

    Girl, 4, Killed By Dog In Chesterfield Inlet, Nunavut

    Girl, 4, Killed By Dog In Chesterfield Inlet, Nunavut
      Police say the toddler from Chesterfield Inlet along the west coast of Hudson Bay was attacked Monday afternoon.

    Girl, 4, Killed By Dog In Chesterfield Inlet, Nunavut

    Private Investors Eye Public Assets Like Airports, Highways: Investor

    Private Investors Eye Public Assets Like Airports, Highways: Investor
    The federal Liberals are considering a system that could see Ottawa — as well as other levels of government — sell infrastructure assets under their jurisdiction.

    Private Investors Eye Public Assets Like Airports, Highways: Investor

    Five Youth Suicides This Year In The City Of Woodstock, Ont., Raise Concerns

    Five Youth Suicides This Year In The City Of Woodstock, Ont., Raise Concerns
    WOODSTOCK, Ont. — Police in a southwestern Ontario city say that five people aged 19 and younger have killed themselves since the beginning of 2016 in what an official of the Canadian Mental Health Association is calling a "suicide contagion."

    Five Youth Suicides This Year In The City Of Woodstock, Ont., Raise Concerns

    Missing Skull, Leg Bones Of Yukon Horse Skeleton Returned To Newspaper

    Missing Skull, Leg Bones Of Yukon Horse Skeleton Returned To Newspaper
    The Whitehorse Star reported last week that the skull and some leg bones of a horse skeleton appeared to have been taken from an excavation site.

    Missing Skull, Leg Bones Of Yukon Horse Skeleton Returned To Newspaper