Gray Whale Die-Off Reaches Mendocino Coast

Article by Elise Cox. First posted on MendoLocal and used with their kind permission. Go right now and follow them on Facebook for more excellent reporting. Subscribe to MendoLocal here

Dead Grey Whale on beach

A female grey whale was reported deceased near Virgin Creek in the Fort Bragg area yesterday morning (MendoLocal.News CC BY 4.0)

A female gray whale was found dead on the beach near Virgin Creek in Mendocino County around mid-morning on April 29.

Sarah Grimes, marine mammal stranding coordinator and educator for the Noyo Center for Marine Science, said the death is part of a troubling trend.

An increasing number of gray whales are appearing undernourished and dying along the West Coast. Last year, 21 gray whales were found dead in San Francisco Bay; so far this year, seven have been reported there. The whale found near Virgin Creek is the first recorded dead in Mendocino County this year.

Grimes was on the beach Wednesday afternoon with an intern and another scientist taking measurements. If the whale remains accessible, the team plans to conduct a full necropsy.

She said the whale was a subadult — close to full size but not yet sexually mature.

Gray whales are baleen whales, meaning they have flexible plates of keratin hanging from their upper jaws that act like a sieve to filter small fish and krill. They undertake the longest migration of any mammal, traveling up to 14,000 miles round trip between feeding grounds in the Arctic and breeding grounds in Mexico.

Gray whales in the Atlantic Ocean went extinct in the 1700s. They are considered critically endangered in the western North Pacific, but until recently, the eastern North Pacific population was regarded as a conservation success. Although hunted to near extinction in the 19th and early 20th centuries, gray whales were protected by the International Whaling Commission in 1946. By the mid-1990s, they were removed from endangered species lists under the U.S. Endangered Species Act and by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

But an “unusual mortality event” from 2019 to 2023 has raised alarm among whale biologists, who say the population may no longer be sustainable.

“The gray whales are in precipitous decline, with significant range-wide die-offs, malnourished ‘skinny’ individuals, and reduced reproductive rates,” scientists James Darling, Jorge Urban Ramirez and Steven Swartz wrote in an open letter published by the Whale Trust. “The best available analysis suggests a decrease in critical food species resulting from large-scale ecological changes in traditional Arctic feeding grounds.”

Unable to consume enough food during the summer feeding season, whales — which fast during the winter — may not have the energy reserves needed to reproduce. The scientists are calling for an international review and reassessment of the whales’ protection status.

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7 Please improve the conversation by disagreeing thoughtfully and backing your claims with facts
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Kris
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Kris
1 month ago

Whale of a story. Krilled my vibe.

CsMisadventures
Guest
CsMisadventures
1 month ago

They’re going to need more dynamite.

Bill
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Bill
1 month ago

Let’s appreciate the irony that gray whales were hunted nearly to extinction in centuries passed for oil.
Since the discovery of petroleum as an alternative, we’re burning oil so rapaciously as to alter the atmosphere, the ocean, and food chain to starve a whale, finishing the job harpoons could not!

Bozo
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Bozo
1 month ago
Reply to  Bill

Nobody listened back in the 1950’s 1960’s.. Have 2 kids.
Could have stabilized population at 1970’s levels.

Oops.

We are way into ‘ecological overshoot’ now.
There really is nothing to be done… until the human population decreases.

Capturesdwe23
Farce
Guest
Farce
1 month ago

So many people consuming so much…more more more!!! Jump on a plane and go to your special event- go go go!! Consume mass quantities and watch your planet die around you…Oh- you’re not seeing this you are playing a video game or watching fakebook that’s just wonderful…

Hugo Root
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Hugo Root
1 month ago

We passed the point of no return of sustainability about the year 1900. Even then we werent sustainable. We were using coal, a little oil and gas. Also metals, which arent sustainable into perpetuity & likely irrigation isnt either. However, had we behaved ourselves, we could have built something that would have gone on for a very long time. It would have required keeping the population stable; NO WARS; and not using a lot of really great things. No aircraft; certainly no automobiles; a great number of other things. All the talk about sustainability, a green economy is specious nonsense. Were so far beyond anything sustainable, we may as well read comic books as talk about sustainability. I suspect were close to a massive die off & perhaps the present war is going to be the catalyst.

Jeffersonian
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Jeffersonian
1 month ago

It may be a good thing for the population to adjust to sustainable levels