Chris Ashurst was exploring the remote archipelago of Haida Gwaii on a misty Sunday morning when he came across a large whale carcass washed up on shore.
“It was a big one, too, about 13 metres long,” he recalls.
He and his partner, Ellen, and their dog were camping a few kilometres south of Cape Fife, near Masset on the northeast tip. He had decided to go for a walk when he made the discovery.
“It was getting a bit rotten, a bit of a smell but it wasn’t too far gone. It still had the humpback whale barnacles on its underside,” says Ashurst.
Ashurst, who has lived on Haida Gwaii for more than 20 years, took out his camera to try to document the whale’s tail and pectoral fins to send to Fisheries and Oceans ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½.
“Hopefully, with the photos that we took, we can help identify this one,” says Ashurst. “It gives us a bit of a story to its life and if it had a name and research associated with it. And importantly, we can, you know, maybe try to get clues as to how it died.”
Ashurst says another humpback carcass washed up just seven kilometres south of the village of Masset.
A total of three whales have been confirmed dead by Fisheries and Oceans ÎÚÑ»´«Ã½ within one month, and two showed signs of blunt force trauma, leaving experts and researchers wondering what is causing the deaths.
“It’s sad that we have had so many in one month and we are hoping this trend does not continue,” says Paul Cottrell, marine mammal co-ordinator for DFO.
On Oct. 12 and Oct. 15, a humpback carcass was spotted floating in the ocean near Prince Rupert, but it’s not clear where or even if it washed up.
“We don’t know in this last month if it’s three or four because we weren’t able to ID that floating animal, and we have to be careful about double-counting animals because they do float around,” says Cottrell.
On Oct. 23, a female humpback whale was found dead off Malcolm Island. Nicknamed Spike, she had suffered blunt force trauma. On Nov. 5, a young male was found dead and had signs of blunt force trauma but experts have not been able to positively identify him. Finally, on Nov. 13, the third carcass washed up. It hasn’t been identified due to the heavy decay.
“When animals die, they don’t always pop up and show up on the beach where we can do a necropsy,” says Cottrell. “Often, if animals die in less than 150 metres of water, they will bloat up and float up. If they die in very deep water, they tend to not come up to the surface.”
On average, there are about four to 10 humpback whale deaths per year, he says.
“This is a pulse of deaths, so whenever you get that, it is a concern,” says Cottrell. “Overall, for this year, we are within a normal range for humpbacks deaths, a little on the high side but not anything that is super alarming. Having said that … the last month having three or four is more than normal.”
Jackie Hildering, a humpback whale researcher with the Port McNeill-based Marine Education and Research Society, hopes the public learns more about the threats to these massive mammals.
“It’s very heavy to know that these whales have died,” she says. “These are the ones that are the ambassadors for the ones that we don’t get to see yet, which is so important. The importance of knowing who whales are as individuals.”
Hildering believes large boats might not even be aware if they strike a whale. “The large-vessel traffic is a potentially silent killer … it’s like a hit and run, where you may not even know that you’ve hit a whale,” she says. “These are big whales, hungry whales that don’t have biosonar. They can be resting just below the surface and then they can suddenly come up.
“Those vessels need to realize that those whales are not going to get out of the way.”
The researcher is asking the public to report whales in distress, or ones suspected to have been hit by a boat.
Necropsies are being conducted on the three whales, which could take months for final results.
“Our marine necropsies team is a dedicated bunch and we’ve been working hard to get to all of these animals and try to figure out why and how they died, and cause of death — that’s not always possible if the animal is decomposed,” says Cottrell, who urged people to call immediately when they see a dead whale.
“The quicker we can get there, the better data we can get and hopefully determine the cause of death.”
DFO’s 24-hour reporting line is 1-800-465-4336.