Tuesday 13 August 2019 | 9

Here the ocean is dying and along with it the Southern resident killer whales

Here the ocean is dying and along with it the Southern resident killer whales

Mis à jour le 18 August 2019

The end of a world. Southern residents killer whales have not been seen for weeks off San Juan Island. Overfishing and dams are starving them out, there are no more fish or so little in this sea that was once the cradle for hundreds of them. Here it is a species that is dying, the very one that has also paid a heavy price to the captive entertainment industry. We are there with our scientific partners, to try to save them.

Hr blog

We are here facing a beautiful landscape. The sun spreads its rays upon a rock face which projects into the Salish Sea, west of Seattle, on the northern edge of the United States. Here the Pacific Ocean surrounds the islands San Juan, Lopez, Victoria and Orca. And yet ...

Last year again, humpback whales or Minke whales shared this marine territory with seals, porpoises and Southern resident killer whales. The transient orcas were only passing through this period, as migratory birds do elsewhere.

In the sky, seagulls, of course, but also guillemots and puffins with beaks of a resplendent colour, as well as the majestic bald eagles (the "American eagle") who over look them all from above the top of pine trees at the edge of the coast.

The sky is almost empty and the sea, almost flat.

This year has a bitter taste. Ken Balcomb, whom we joined at the Centre for Whale Research (CWR), of which One Voice is a member, confirms what we feared: there are no more fish. Not enough to feed all of this exceptional wildlife anyway. Southern orcas need more than sixty kilos of fish a day. For the sake of saving energy, their appetite is more for the larger fish, like for example the royal salmon. Overfishing prevents the renewal of the species, dams built upstream of the large rivers prevent the salmon from returning to their spawning grounds. The few who reach there are fished in the artificial lakes created by these dams and never reach the ocean, where the killer whales are dying one after another. Royal salmon and the orcas of the South are all slowly dying.

Lolita's family, pods J, K and L, as they are known, have been decimated. No viable offspring has survived now for three years. Neither Tahlequah's baby nor Scarlet ... In the past, they had time to sleep and play. Now everything is centred on foraging, and the intense stress of hunger that plagues them all.

It's a tragedy that is played out on deaf ears

But other orcas are visible and are doing, very well. These are the "transient" orcas. They spend every summer in the Salish Sea, and do not suffer from starvation because they feed upon mammals and not fish. Tourists looking to see orcas are not disappointed ... And no one wants to spoil their fun by telling them about the invisible drama unfolding that is the orcas of the South. However, it is of the utmost urgency that people know this on this naturally wonderful site, as for the different tigers (Bengal, Sumatra, Bali, Siberia ...), it is a whole ecosystem that is wiped out from the planet, as are the large primary forests. And that, in the general indifference! In the ocean, it's harder to imagine this with aerial views. And once the damage is done, it's irreversible. 

Awareness work must be conducted urgently on this disappearance! One Voice has spent the past year campaigning with your help alongside the San Juan Island-based Centre for Whale Research to reopen the dams. This summer we visited scientists who have been working there for more than 40 years. We also met Native Americans who consider these orcas as members of their family. We cannot let Southern Resident Orcs disappear without doing anything!

Julia Mothé
Hr blog

In the subject

Meeting with the Lummi Nation for Southern Orcas

Comments 9

I accept that publication of my comments is subject to the code of conduct.

pouguy | Thursday 22 August 2019

Il se jette autant de poissons qu'on en pêche, quel gâchis. Certains pays ne respectent pas ou n'ont pas de limite de tailles de poissons, alors ils pêchent les petits comme les gros.

Jocelyne | Thursday 22 August 2019

Inadmissible

Cathe | Thursday 22 August 2019

Nous sommes nombreux à être consternés par le comportement infâme des humains.
L'argent roi fait faire n'importe quoi !

trochu | Tuesday 13 August 2019

Tout ce texte qui n'est que la triste réalité, m'émeut, me bouleverse, m'attriste profondément et me fait très mal. Je vous remercie beaucoup ONE VOICE de vouloir rencontrer des scientifiques et de faire pression sur tous les gouvernements en les sensibilisant sur la disparition d'animaux et de toutes les espèces d'animaux ETRES VIVANTS menacées d'extinction. C'est ahurissant de constater à quel point les autorités ferment encore les yeux et ne s'engagent en rien ! De tels individus parmi tant d'autres n'ont toujours pas compris que si les animaux meurent et s'éteignent, alors les humains aussi.
Il est vrai que même à la campagne, nous ne voyons plus beaucoup d'oiseaux, d'insectes.
Nous devons agir, informer et sensibiliser tout le monde et nous engager pour la protection et la défense de tous les animaux par l'action!

Thomas Schwiers | Friday 23 August 2019

Tout ce texte qui n'est que la triste réalité, m'émeut, me bouleverse, m'attriste profondément et me fait très mal. Je vous remercie beaucoup ONE VOICE de vouloir rencontrer des scientifiques et de faire pression sur tous les gouvernements en les sensibilisant sur la disparition d'animaux et de toutes les espèces d'animaux ETRES VIVANTS menacées d'extinction. C'est ahurissant de constater à quel point les autorités ferment encore les yeux et ne s'engagent en rien ! De tels individus parmi tant d'autres n'ont toujours pas compris que si les animaux meurent et s'éteignent, alors les humains aussi.
Il est vrai que même à la campagne, nous ne voyons plus beaucoup d'oiseaux, d'insectes.
Nous devons agir, informer et sensibiliser tout le monde et nous engager pour la protection et la défense de tous les animaux par l'action!