Tuesday, March 31, 2020

Catalog #3560 Follow-Up

The Travels of Mother #3560 and Calf
As outlined in our season summary, our most-sighted right whales this season were first-time mother, Catalog #3560 and her calf.  They went south and up into the Gulf of Mexico.  As of 27 March, they were south of the Florida Keys, and, may be coming back north, through the Marineland area, enroute to their summer grounds. If you are along the coast, keep your eyes peeled and the Right Whale Hotline number, 
1-888-979-4253, handy!

Donations
Volunteers and volunteer effort are at the core of our program. However, there are expenses. We buy office supplies, computer and photography supplies, binoculars, team bags, GPS units, and drones. There are also insurances, and bookkeeping and accounting costs. Bottom line: it all adds up.

Individual donations are a significant part of our support. If you would like to contribute financially to this effort, and any amount is most appreciated, please make your check payable to Associated Scientists at Woods Hole, and mail to Box 721, Woods Hole, MA 02543.  The donations are tax-deductible, and we will send you an acknowledgement.
We assure you that none of your donation will be used for salaries. We write proposals for foundation grants to cover this item.

In past years, we have successfully raised the money to keep the program going. Please help us to do it again!

Saturday, March 28, 2020

2020 Season Summary

The 20th season of the Marineland Right Whale Project began on an upnote.  On New Year’s Day, Jim Hain, heading south on Route 95, was at a lunch stop at an IHOP in Virginia when the phone rang. Whales! Julie Albert with the Marine Resources Council relayed a call from a beachwalker in Ormond-by-the-Sea. Dave and Maryann Gustafson, Terry Clark, and Ralph Bundy responded. A drone was launched. It was female Catalog #3560 with her first calf. This mother-calf pair was first reported on 16 December off Georgia. In the following two-week period, they went unsighted. The whales appear. The whales disappear. The New Year’s sighting was the first since the 12/16 date and the first in the state of Florida for this season! It was a holiday with good weather. Lots of people were out and stopped to watch. The Sheriff’s Department helped direct traffic. The Florida Fish & Wildlife survey plane also responded. It was an auspicious start to the 2020 New Year!

During the course of the season, Catalog #3560 and her calf were sighted eight more times by our program―our most-sighted whales for the season. The pair meandered south and north several times. The last sighting by our group was on 12 February at the Gamble Rogers State Park, through a gap in the fog. Then, they swam south of Cape Canaveral and were sighted off Sebastian Inlet, off Miami, and off Key Largo. Then, all was quiet. Next―surprise―they were photographed in the Gulf of Mexico off the Florida panhandle on 11 March. As of 24 March, they are swimming south along the west coast of Florida. Will they pass through the Keys and once again pass through our area? Time will tell. We will keep you posted. 

This rare event has occurred before. On 4 December 2005, we sighted female #2503, Boomerang, and calf heading south past Marineland. By January 2006, they had made it around to the Gulf of Mexico and were off Texas. In August and September of that year, the pair was reported in the Bay of Fundy, Nova Scotia, Canada. There is another record of this type.  In 2018, a juvenile went into the Gulf of Mexico and was sighted several times off the panhandle and the west coast of Florida.

The other frequently sighted mother-calf pair this season was #3546, Halo, with her second calf. We sighted the pair five times. She is also a traveler. The pair meandered between Crescent Beach and Daytona Beach. On 31 January, photos on social media showed her off Cocoa Beach and Jetty Park (Port Canaveral). They next reappeared moving north on 5 February off Flagler Beach. On 12 March they were reported off Myrtle Beach, SC. We can guess that their northward migration was underway. 

The Marineland Right Whale Project had 15 sightings this season. It was our best season in the last four years. We flew our drones on nine occasions, and found that they greatly enhanced/synergized the results from our shore-based network. Using big cameras with long lenses, we obtained shore-based photos on six occasions. We worked with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Team on several occasions to help obtain biopsy samples of two calves (1), and aerial photos of several individuals. We also collaborated with the Marine Resources Council in providing and receiving calls to/from their sighting hotline. Many of our volunteers had right whale sightings, including several dozen who saw their first-ever right whale this season.

Stay tuned to this blog and join us in 2021!

(1) Genetic data provide another valuable information source and a parallel research approach.  The DNA in the skin sample provides a genetic identity, and can be used to determine sex, establish paternity and relatedness to other individuals, and help identify whales not photographically identified.  There is a genetic database for this information.

Friday, March 20, 2020

New Videos

Three new videos from our 2020 season have been uploaded to our YouTube Channel.

* New Year’s Whales.  The first sighting of the 2020 survey season: female #3560 and her first calf, close to shore at Ormond-by-the-Sea, Florida.  Runtime: 1:54.

* Documentary in the Making.  A behind-the-scenes look at the February visit of a Canadian film crew that is making a right whale documentary for CBC television, to be aired in 2021.  Runtime: 4:12.

* Our People: Second Half of the 2020 Season.  Glimpses of the dedicated volunteers and staff behind the Marineland Right Whale Project.  Runtime: 4:14.

To access, click on the link below:

(Alternatively, go to YouTube, and search on Marineland Right Whale Project.)

You will also see the previous four videos from the season―Halo returns, Frisky calf, News4JAX interviews volunteers, and Our people: First half of the 2020 season.

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

Right Whales on the Move!

She’s a traveler!
On 12 February, through a gap in the fog at Gamble Rogers State Park, we had our last sighting of right whale #3560 with her first calf, heading south.  How far south?  Well then. . .sighting reports came in as she passed Sebastian Inlet, and. . .Yikes!. . .Miami!!  The last sighting was on 20 February off Key Largo.  We don’t know whether she will continue around the corner into the Gulf of Mexico, or, whether she will make a U-turn and come back north.

Traveler #2
Similarly, our last sighting of #3546, Halo, was on 5 February when we tracked her from North Flagler north to 16th Road.  And then. . .she was off Sapelo Island, Georgia, on the 10th.   Has the northward migration begun, or, will we see her again?

Do not despair!
We have now gone more than two weeks without a right whale sighting in our area.  But wait!  This has happened before.  Sometimes, this has been the end of our sightings for the season.  But at other times, we have had sightings in March.  (Halo was a March whale in 2014.)  We will stick with it.

Predicting the future
Whales and weather!  As Yogi Berra said, “Predictions are hard, especially if it’s about the future.”