Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Technology Used In Hunt Of A Different Kind For North Atlantic Right Whales

The Canadian Press, 20 Jul, 2015 11:07 AM
  • Technology Used In Hunt Of A Different Kind For North Atlantic Right Whales
HALIFAX — Scientists are preparing to deploy an arsenal of high-tech gadgetry into the Atlantic Ocean to try to track down one of nature's biggest, but most elusive creatures in a whale hunt of a different kind.
 
A team of researchers plan to use autonomous gliders, air support and acoustic devices to listen and watch for endangered North Atlantic right whales to determine their migratory routes along the east coast.
 
Kimberley Davies, an oceanographer at Dalhousie University in Halifax, said the whales have not been showing up in their usual habitats in great numbers and are likely going to areas not well known to scientists.
 
Davies said similar work last summer in the Roseway Basin, a known right whale habitat, left scientists shaking their heads when they recorded 93 sightings in August and then found they had all left just two weeks later.
 
"The fact that there were so many whales and they just deserted the whole area was shocking," she said.
 
"So it deepens the mystery because we don't know where they went."
 
Canadian and American scientists will slip the sleek yellow underwater vehicles into waters off Nova Scotia on July 27 and begin a roughly two-month long process of collecting data on the marine ecosystem and its inhabitants.
 
The North Atlantic right whales are known to travel into the Bay of Fundy in the summer to feed with their calves. Most make the long trek from their breeding grounds off Georgia and Florida, ending up in the bay's plankton-rich waters around June. They are also known to gather in the Roseway Basin off Nova Scotia's south coast.
 
Moira Brown, a senior scientist with the New England Aquarium, said they are seeing fewer and fewer of the animals in the bay and they are arriving in Canadian waters earlier than usual.
 
Identifying their habitats is important because the slow-moving mammals are vulnerable to ship strikes and entanglements with fishing gear, she said, adding that they can alert ships or rerouting shipping lanes once they know where the whales are going.
 
"Right whales are doing all kinds of strange things," she said in an interview.
 
"If we find other critical habitat areas, then we'll start looking at the human activities in them and see what we need to do to keep giving these whales a little more of an edge."
 
The team will use up to seven gliders, which are equipped with acoustic devices and high-frequency echo sounders that can instantly identify what type of mammal they're hearing. The material they collect will be sent back to the crew in almost real time.
 
"These autonomous gliders are like having a secret weapon in your back pocket," said Brown.
 
"It looks like the whales may be shifting around and this is the first year of a really huge multi-institutional effort to try to figure out where they're going."
 
The project comes as the North Atlantic right whale population inches up slowly, rising to about 520 from a mere 300 in the late 1990s. Their population has grown by about two per cent a year, with an average of 22 calves being born since 2001 - but only 11 born last year.
 
In 2003, the shipping lanes were altered in the Bay of Fundy to steer vessels clear of known whale habitats due to work done by the whale researchers. Five years later, Transport Canada made the Roseway Basin an area to be avoided by ships of a certain size.

MORE National ARTICLES

Two People Found Dead In Coquitlam Home

Two People Found Dead In Coquitlam Home
COQUITLAM, B.C. — Two bodies have been found in a suburban Vancouver home where police said they were investigating a suspicious death.

Two People Found Dead In Coquitlam Home

Six Dead In Punjab's Moga District; Police Suspect 'Granthi' Slit Throats Of 5 Before Killing Self

Six Dead In Punjab's Moga District; Police Suspect 'Granthi' Slit Throats Of 5 Before Killing Self
At least five young people were brutally hacked to death in their house in Punjab's Moga district on Thursday, police said. The suspected killer, a 'granthi' (Sikh religious preacher) too was also found dead under mysterious circumstances.

Six Dead In Punjab's Moga District; Police Suspect 'Granthi' Slit Throats Of 5 Before Killing Self

Ontario Government Under Fire For Office Art With Explicit Sex Images

Ontario Government Under Fire For Office Art With Explicit Sex Images
Sacred Circle VI by French-Canadian artist Rosalie Maheux is part of a collection of works by artists under the age of 30 on display in the John B. Aird gallery in the lobby of an Ontario government office block in downtown Toronto.

Ontario Government Under Fire For Office Art With Explicit Sex Images

Speedy Report Stops Suspicious Fire From Jumping To Parched Victoria-Area Woods

Speedy Report Stops Suspicious Fire From Jumping To Parched Victoria-Area Woods
DISTRICT OF HIGHLANDS, B.C. — A firebug may be on the loose in the suburban Victoria District of Highlands, on Vancouver Island.

Speedy Report Stops Suspicious Fire From Jumping To Parched Victoria-Area Woods

Newspaper Apologizes For Involving Liberal Joyce Murray In Controversy Over Ad

Newspaper Apologizes For Involving Liberal Joyce Murray In Controversy Over Ad
Liberal MP Joyce Murray is apologizing for a newspaper advertisement in which she appears to be feeding racial stereotypes about aboriginal people.

Newspaper Apologizes For Involving Liberal Joyce Murray In Controversy Over Ad

B.C. Health Firings Prompt Legal Changes To Pave Way For Investigation

VICTORIA — British Columbia's ongoing health firings scandal is about to share the stage with the Liberal government's vaunted liquefied natural gas project law.

B.C. Health Firings Prompt Legal Changes To Pave Way For Investigation