Military tests off Washington killed at least one orca, scientist suspects
Some U.S. scientists believe a killer whale that washed up off the coast
of Washington last month might have been killed by a military explosion.
The three-year-old female orca was a member of L-pod, a group that lives
in Canadian waters during the summer months.
The killer whale’s
carcass washed ashore at Long Beach, Wash., Feb. 11.
A necropsy found
the marine mammal died from highly unusual injuries.
'Chances are
some other whales got killed, too,'—Marine scientist Ken Balcomb
"The entire body showed evidence of massive blunt trauma, some sort of
pressure wave that was very blunt in nature not the pointed bow of a ship or
anything," said Ken Balcomb, senior scientist at the Center for Whale
Research at Friday Harbour, Wash., about 15 kilometres east of Victoria.
Balcomb suspects the animal was killed by an explosive device, one of 96
the U.S. Navy deployed in the area in 2011.
"I suspect she died in
U.S. waters. And probably from an explosion,” Balcomb said. “We're seeking
information about what explosions at least the navy would be aware of."
He said he's worried that ongoing naval exercises could wipe out entire
pods, including the fewer than 90 orcas that make up the endangered resident
population in the southern end of Georgia Strait and in Juan de Fuca Strait,
between Vancouver Island and Washington’s Olympic Peninsula.
Seals also killed
Balcomb said 38 seals died from similar injuries last year, and he says a
final body count from L-Pod won't be known until it returns to the Juan de
Fuca Strait in July.
“Chances are some other whales got killed too," said Balcomb.
The
scientist said he hopes an investigation by the U.S. National Marine
Fisheries Service will get access to the Navy's classified documents on its
activities.
However, a spokesperson for the U.S. Navy denies it
conducted any exercises using explosives in the area in February.
The
Royal Canadian Navy told CBC News it did use sonar in the Strait of Juan de
Fuca Feb. 6, but that no marine mammals were in the area at that time.
But some environmentalists are not satisfied.
“We'd like the navy
to release the data on what they were doing,” said Jay Ritchlin, of the
David Suzuki Foundation.
“We'd also, basically, just like them to
understand and acknowledge that this is a critical habitat for these whales
and should be designated as off limits for this kind of sonar training."
Source:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/story/2012/03/21/bc-whale-explosion-death.html
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