Whale Poop Analyzed For Clues To Orca Decline

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PHUONG LE | 12/20/08 08:05 AM | AP

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SEATTLE — Using a trained dog to sniff for poop and petri dishes attached to long poles, scientists are analyzing killer whales' scat and breath samples in the hopes of solving the mystery of Puget Sound's dwindling orca population.

Seven resident killer whales that frequent the inland waters of Washington went missing this year and are presumed dead, and researchers want an explanation.

"We're losing animals and we don't exactly understand why," said Brad Hanson, a wildlife biologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Fisheries Service.

University of Washington researchers analyzing stress hormones and toxins from scat of the remaining 83 orcas have found signs suggesting the mammals may be starving, possibly due to dwindling salmon runs.

A different team of scientists from Global Research and Rescue is riding alongside the whales, using petri dishes on poles to capture air droplets from the blowholes. The breath samples are being studied for potentially harmful organisms.

Other theories as to the orcas' demise include ocean pollutants such as oil and sewage, or vessel noise disrupting their ability to find food.

The Center for Whale Research on San Juan Island plans to tag the southern resident population of killer whales next year to track their winter migration. While the region's signature whales have been studied for more than three decades, it's a mystery where they go and what they eat when they leave the Puget Sound.

Starting next year, researchers will attach two-inch satellite tags on the dorsal fins of six of the orcas. For the past seven years, two of the pods have been showing up in central California, an indication they may be foraging farther for salmon.

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"We've got to think bigger about the whole food issue," said Joe Gaydos, a wildlife veterinarian and regional director of the SeaDoc Society.

What the whales eat when they leave Puget Sound has implications for salmon harvest in other areas like California and Alaska, he said.

UW researchers who use a 2-liter bottle on a telescoping pole to collect whale scat for analysis have found a link between whale mortality and low levels of thyroid hormone, which partly controls metabolism. When whale deaths are up, thyroid levels are down, suggesting that the whales are starving.

The results are still preliminary and unpublished, but Sam Wasser, director of the UW Center for Conservation Biology, said they show a consistent nutritional problem.

When whales don't eat much, they draw down their fat reserves, where toxins are stored, said Katherine Ayres, a graduate student doing work under Wasser. When that happens, toxins enter the circulation system and could cause health problems, she said.

It's unclear whether the whales are strictly starving or whether they're becoming more susceptible to disease, but it all goes back to food, she said.

"The future for the fisheries is grim, and it's going to get worse," Balcomb said. "I expect that we'll have a worsening of the whale situation."

Studies show orcas prefer Chinook salmon, a species listed as threatened or endangered in several waterways in the northwest, including Puget Sound and the Columbia River.

Scientists are trying to better understand which salmon runs are important to the orcas.

"We're taking a long hard look at which runs correlate with births and deaths," Hanson said. "That has tremendous implication for our ability to improve conservation."

Once they've collected fish scales and other remains the orcas leave behind after feeding, Hanson and others run it through a genetic database that allows them to identify the species in a way they weren't able to a few years ago.

The lack of prey may not be the only barrier to orca feeding. Vessel noise may disrupt the mammal's ability to find food.

To date, four citations have been issued under a new state law designed to keep vessels farther away from whales. Among the offenders were two different Canada-based whale-watching operations ticketed for coming within 300 feet of the orcas, said Sgt. Russ Mullins with the state Department of Fish and Wildlife.

NOAA Fisheries is also writing new rules for vessels operating in federal waters.

Lack of food leads to other problems, including increased susceptibility to disease, said J.Pete Schroeder, a marine mammal veterinarian and director of research with Global Research and Rescue.

Schroeder and others have been capturing the breath droplets the whales emit from their blowholes.

They're studying potentially harmful organisms in the thin sea surface layer of the Puget Sound and in the breath samples of the orcas.

Schroeder found that the orcas carry at least 13 antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Pathogens normally live in blowholes and upper respiratory tracts without causing disease, but whales with a suppressed immune system can become infected.

"There are diseases out there that can wipe out this population," Gaydos said.

All of this collective research will enable scientists to build a health assessment profile for the individual whales, Schroeder said.

Advocates argue that the orcas' problems should be seen as a call to action to clean up Puget Sound because the whales' decline means something far greater that losing the species itself.

"It means that the whole habitat is losing its ability to sustain life," said Howard Garrett, director of the Orca Network.

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On the Net:

Center for Whale Research: http://www.whaleresearch.com/

National Marine Fisheries Service: http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/

Global Research and Rescue: http://www.grrescue.org/

University of Washington Center for Conservation Biology: http://depts.washington.edu/conserv/

SEATTLE — Using a trained dog to sniff for poop and petri dishes attached to long poles, scientists are analyzing killer whales' scat and breath samples in the hopes of solving the mystery of Pu...
SEATTLE — Using a trained dog to sniff for poop and petri dishes attached to long poles, scientists are analyzing killer whales' scat and breath samples in the hopes of solving the mystery of Pu...
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My 9 year old daughter wanted me to point out that Orca are not whales. They are a species of dolphin. So, it's not whale poop, but dolphin poop. :)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:44 PM on 12/21/2008

actually Orca's are whales, but i won't tell. :)

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:12 PM on 12/22/2008
- Syncoptic1 I'm a Fan of Syncoptic1 6 fans permalink
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I've never seen the word "poop" used so frequently in a news article.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 PM on 12/21/2008

I totally stopped eating seafood over 6 years ago after reading article after article in the science magazines about the oceans on the verge of collapse. Now we read about this dithering analyzing poop while 2 years ago I was reading headlines in one of the Seattle daylies that the Orcas were starving. Seattle's beloved Orcas. Seatteites love their Orcas ALMOST as much as their salmon. Dinner plate salmon, that is. I noticed no one here has suggested people STOP EATING SALMON. No, because we can't PROVE the decimated population of the Orcas favorite food source is human harvesting and therefore a big cause of Orca's dying.
The Puget sound is overfished to feed the seafood-loving humans, and that's more important. Just like we can't threaten the livelihood of people wanting to take people out for whale-watching, or educate whale-watchers that their "watching" is actually "harrassing." So lets call it what it is, "whale harrassing." "Hey, I just had the greatest time last weekend harrassing whales in a little motorboat!"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:41 PM on 12/21/2008

If they are seriously looking for whale poop they are going to find a lot of lawyers just underneath the poop. Caution is advised.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:57 PM on 12/20/2008
- mbaty I'm a Fan of mbaty 20 fans permalink

I remember a long time ago I had a "save the whales" bumper sticker. People just laughed. But it's not just whales, it's bees, it's frogs, it's all sorts of animals that are showing an inablility to deal with the myriad environmental factors that humans have been aggravating. We need these animals to have a healthy ecosphere. It may be cheaper now to do business without considering the effects on the environment, but it will cost a lot more later to try and clean it up and rebuild dwindling animal populations. We need to respect the role these animals play, directly or indirectly, on our ability to habitate this planet. But people have been saying this for years. Is it really going to take a large crisis for us to take action about this?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:27 PM on 12/20/2008

I saved the Whales...I've got the whole set now.

Dude WE are Man...we need to kill something.....even if it's only a carrot.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:50 PM on 12/20/2008
- chirps I'm a Fan of chirps 12 fans permalink


Unfortunately, you're right.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 PM on 12/20/2008
- SimJack I'm a Fan of SimJack 60 fans permalink
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Albert Einstein once said, “If the honeybee goes extinct, we have four more years on Earth.” Here's a key article on the extinction of other keystone species (plankton, edible fish, topsoil fauna/flora, etc.) as well as other referenced links in support of their conclusions. Pollution, chemical and noise, can dramatically affect normal mammalian development, learning and behavior, key factors in whale survival. Endocrine disruptors, found in many plastic products and other environmental pollutants contribute to abnormal reproductive system development and behavior as well as profoundly disturb other brain and immune system functions.

http://www.arlingtoninstitute.org/wbp/species-extinction/443

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:07 PM on 12/21/2008

The next study will be of Republican's poop.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:01 PM on 12/20/2008
- pokemon I'm a Fan of pokemon 14 fans permalink
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That could go anywhere...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 AM on 12/21/2008
- pokemon I'm a Fan of pokemon 14 fans permalink
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Lets see, we dump all sorts of crap into the oceans, we over fish, we hunt and cause the decline of some of their prey.. Perhaps, and I am digging here, perhaps we are the cause.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:17 PM on 12/20/2008

no S-hit ..ya think?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:51 PM on 12/20/2008
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There are many problems afflicting the Orcas here in Puget Sound, and I would be surprised if it were any one factor that is causing the decline. We have had salmon-run collapses (particularly the Chinook, which is an essential food source for Orcas), and the rockfish, oolichan and herring fisheries have collapsed as well. Part of it is pollution (this area is "sandwiched" between Vancouver, B.C. and Seattle, WA, and nearby Victoria, B.C. discharges its untreated sewage into the adjacent Straight of Juan de Fuca); part is environmental (both Seattle and Vancouver, B.C. maintain huge commercial ports, with large volumes of shipping traffic); part of it is lack of food supply (the Orcas are clearly showing signs of malnutrition). Mainly, it is indifference on the part of the local governments, who babble on endlessly about the need to protect native species but do little to back it up. We need to properly treat our sewage (including industrial and agricultural runoff); regulate vessel traffic (including restrictions on ship corridors, and suppressing ship-related noise); and rebuild the viability of the Orcas' food source (including tightly regulating fish-farm effluents, limiting the herring fishery, and decommissioning dams on the Columbia River). The Northern Resident Community (Orca pods) are relatively healthy in comparison to the "local" J, K and L pods, and the reasons for that should not be seen as a total mystery.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:25 PM on 12/20/2008

I know that area well and it's far from pristine no matter what the post cards look like.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:56 PM on 12/20/2008
- LeeCalif I'm a Fan of LeeCalif 65 fans permalink

The Navy is blasting out their inner ears.

Screw the darn Navy !

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:20 PM on 12/20/2008
- lizr I'm a Fan of lizr 221 fans permalink
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look for effects of navy sonar first!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:49 PM on 12/20/2008
- wadenelson1 I'm a Fan of wadenelson1 224 fans permalink
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Pity the poor scuba diver assigned this task.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:42 PM on 12/20/2008
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Whale Poop ... not a bad name for a band.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:29 PM on 12/20/2008
- bobhobard I'm a Fan of bobhobard 2 fans permalink

Photo caption:
Look, you can collect the poop but a rectal exam is out of the question.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:27 PM on 12/20/2008

Do you really think so?

America is the super power, if we want to collect poop, we will. I just hope we don't throw it like the guy with shoes at Bush. It will be hard to duck poop and if will not look good on a news video replay.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 12/21/2008
- PepeLepew I'm a Fan of PepeLepew 284 fans permalink
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I used to live in the San Juans, I suspect two things are hurting the orcas.
One is the loss of salmon throughout the West Coast. Their food is getting harder and harder to find.
The second is the explosive growth in whale watching. It would be incredible on a summer weekend, you would literally see a hundred boats surrounding a whale, all with their engines running. You would look at it and know it had to be stressing the animal. They've done all sort of studies and of course can't really prove anything one way or another, but it would be just sickening to see these stupid people (the worst were people in their private boats -- they would drive right up to the orcas) harassing these poor animals.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:24 PM on 12/20/2008
- wadenelson1 I'm a Fan of wadenelson1 224 fans permalink
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try swimming underwater with outboard motors going nearby. It's terrifying and painful. There needs to be a half-mile bubble rule to safeguard these creatures.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:42 PM on 12/20/2008
- LeeCalif I'm a Fan of LeeCalif 65 fans permalink

Now think SONAR.

And total deafness and injury.

Sonar from the Navy travels for hundreds of miles.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:21 PM on 12/20/2008
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Just guessing but maybe its all the oil refineries and naval bases causing pollution here.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:34 PM on 12/20/2008
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