Now This Was a Whale Of A Week!


End of Orca Captivity in Sight Support the ORCA Act In Defense of Animals

The end of orca captivity has suddenly transitioned from a distant hope to an attainable reality, and all thanks to landmark legislation introduced recently. In November, 2015, Rep. Adam Schiff introduced a bill to phase out the captivity of orcas. This bill, the Orca Responsibility and Care Advancement (ORCA) Act, amends the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 to prohibit the breeding, wild capture, and import and export of orcas for public display and other purposes. The bill allows both time for businesses to phase out orcas on display, and to adjust their business models, and additionally ensures that the captivity of orcas ends with this generation.

There are many serious threats to the health and well being of orcas in captivity. The stress, boredom, and unnatural living conditions result in the majority of captive orcas dying before reaching age 25, while their wild counterparts live for 30-50 years. Orcas in the wild can swim 100 miles a day, and dive to depths of 300 feet, while captive orcas are confined in shallow tanks as small as 60 by 80 feet wide . As a result of the repetitive swimming patterns and constant exposure to surface waters necessitated by this type of confinement, all captive male orcas have fully collapsed dorsal fins – a condition this is exceedingly rare in the wild. Furthermore, captive orcas face threats from mosquito-borne illnesses, dehydration, and sun damage – issues that are virtually non-existent for orcas in the wild. Click here to read more and take action.

Can Japan Kill Whales In The Name Of Science?
How Our Plastic Pollution is Threatening Orca Populations. The dawning of a new era, dubbed the Anthropocene, has been making headlines lately; the impact humans are now making on the earth will leave lasting traces in the planet’s geological memory.  Millions of years from now, our era will be clearly delineated by the remnants of concrete, aluminum, and plastics; plus elevated levels of greenhouse gases, nitrogen and phosphorus from agriculture, and radioactive isotopes left in layers of rock and ice.

But what is their effect on Earth in the present day? How are these lasting reminders currently impacting our oceans and environment?  As the Rekos Fellow for Orca Conservation for Whale and Dolphin Conservation, I need to know how these things affect orca populations in the present day to help find ways to mitigate their effects.

How Plastic Impacts Orcas
Ocean Pollution and Orcas
Along with the Anthropocene news, several high-profile orca deaths have also made the news in recent months.  The unusual case of an orca beached in South Africa gained international attention when a necropsy revealed she had a belly full of trash.  Large pieces of plastic, including yogurt containers and food wrappers, were found in her stomach with other non-digestible items.  Orcas off South Africa typically eat other marine mammals, large fish, or squid, and while researchers are unsure if the plastic was the ultimate cause of death, it likely aided in her demise.  Some scientists believe she became separated from her pod, possibly because of an illness, and swam into shallow water, where she ate anything she could find in an effort to survive.

Plastics, described as the “greatest threat to marine wildlife,” often dominate the lists of deadly ocean debris, because of their omnipresent nature and very long shelf life.  Even when they do break down, they first become smaller pieces called microplastics, a category including the recently-banned microbeads. Found in many personal care products, their tiny size allows them slip through wastewater treatment plants, and they make their way to the ocean, adding to the growing amount of plastic found in our planet’s water.  Tiny zooplankton mistake the even tinier plastics for food and fill up on them; they get eaten by bigger critters, and so on up the food chain.  In addition to contributing to the problem of marine debris, these tiny particles can also harbor toxic chemicals; pollutants in the water bind to plastic, increasing the toxicity of the microbeads and the impacts to the ocean ecosystem.

Toxic pollution is a major threat to multiple orca populations around the world, from the critically endangered Southern Resident orcas on the west coast of the U.S. to the tiny West Coast Community that inhabits waters around the British Isles; Arctic orcas near Greenland and the resident population of New Zealand.  Recent research indicates that PCBs may be driving orca populations in the North Atlantic to extinction, with levels of contaminants among the highest in the world.

Plastic Contaminants and Marine Life
Though bans started in the late 1970s, PCBs are part of the “persistent organic pollutants” (POPs) class of toxins, named for their lipid-loving (they accumulate in fatty tissues) and very stable (they take a long time to break down and disappear) natures.  PCBs are among the most well-known POPs, along with DDT and PBDEs, a type of flame retardant.  DDT and PCBs have been banned in most developed countries for decades, but many developing nations have only more recently, or have not yet, addressed their use – and efforts to phase out PBDEs only started in the mid-2000s.  Even with bans on their production in place, their long lifetimes and ability to move by wind and water mean that POPs are still prevalent in our land and water.  While most countries have addressed production and use, unfortunately, cleanup efforts are sluggish at best.

These contaminants can impair the immune and reproductive systems of orcas, act as endocrine disruptors, and alter development of the brain and reproductive systems.  In well-studied orca populations, concentrations of POPs are significant enough that we can tell where the orcas forage based on the amount of DDT or PBDEs in their system.  Just like the movement of microplastics up the food chain, these toxins are absorbed by creatures at the base of the ecosystem, then eaten by bigger organisms, and gradually increase in a process called “bioaccumulation.”  Orcas, apex predators in the marine ecosystem, are the recipient of an entire food web’s concentration of contaminants.  Today’s calves, born years after the highest usage of most POPs, are still heavily impacted by these toxins through nursing, when their mothers offload their own toxin loads burning their fat stores to produce milk.  No calves have been seen in the West Coast Community in decades of study, and a small orca community in Southern Europe has only had five surviving calves between 1999 and 2011.

The Threat of Entanglement 
Sadly, the West Coast Community now consists of only eight members after the recent loss of a female orca to another significant human-caused threat: entanglement.  Lulu, as she was known to researchers, beached on the Isle of Tiree in Scotland late in 2015 with evidence of a chronic entanglement around her tail.  Though orcas aren’t one of the most commonly entangled species, they can be injured or killed by ropes in the water.  Another orca washed up last year in California with line and fishing gear wrapped around his fluke; and in a memorable incident in the summer of 2014, a young orca from the threatened Northern Resident community was freed from a net while her family anxiously waited nearby.

Plastics, toxins, and entanglements are just a few of the major threats to orca populations worldwide, and in many regions we still don’t know enough to understand the effects on these iconic and remarkable whales.
Ocean Pollution and Orcas
While researchers collect information and learn more about what orcas need to be healthy and thrive, here are some ways to help lessen our impact on the ocean:
  • Reduce, reuse, recycle -Cut back on plastic products and packaging – try some reusable grocery bags
  • Practice natural lawn care and reduce your use of fertilizers and pesticides
  • Research where your food comes from – go with local, organic, earth-friendly options
  • Restore – support efforts to clean up toxins, participate in ecosystem restoration projects and environmental cleanup efforts
  • Shop green for cleaning supplies and personal care items
    • Switching products? Treat toxic cleaning supplies as hazardous waste and check in with your city on how to dispose of them.
    • Click here for details on how to get rid of anything containing microbeads
Learn more about how WDC helps whales and dolphins around the world, and support our orca conservation work.
Help protect endangered whales and other Gulf wildlife. Tell the Federal government: Take action to protect whales and other Gulf wildlife.



The Gulf of Mexico is home to amazing wildlife like endangered sperm whales and sea turtles. But instead of protecting these threatened animals, the federal government is planning on increasing the risk of new oil spills and climate disaster by leasing off 43 million acres of the Gulf to new oil drilling.

Sign the Care2 petition asking the White House and the U.S. Department of the Interior to halt new oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico.

In his recent and final state of the union address, President Obama promised to "change the way we manage our oil and coal resources so that they better reflect the costs they impose on taxpayers and our planet."

Last week, his administration followed through on that promise and canceled new coal mining on federal lands. The decision was one more step in an impressive legacy of climate change leadership.

Can he do the same in the Gulf of Mexico and help protect communities, wetlands and wildlife from the impacts of oil drilling and climate change?

The Department of the Interior is planning on auctioning off an area the size of Washington state to oil companies soon. Even though the BP drilling disaster showed clearly how vulnerable the Gulf is to oil spills, much of this new area will be even deeper and more dangerous.

Even worse, the Gulf holds the 8th largest source of global warming pollution on the planet. If we're going to avoid the worst impacts of climate change, we need to keep this pollution in the ground!

Sign the Care2 petition, and demand the White House and the Department of the Interior act now to cancel new oil drilling leases in the Gulf.




Hello fellow adventurers! We’ve offered multi-day sea kayaking tours since 1997 and believe there is no better way to explore BC's coastal paradise, the pristine wilderness and its abundant wildlife. Explore the Pacific ocean in British Columbia, Canada, home of the killer whale (Orca) and humpback whale. We want you to fall in love with kayaking and our unique coast, and our passion shows in everything we do. Come visit and find the magic & spirit of the Pacific Northwest.
Humpack whales in the Santa Barbara Channel