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  • 2
    Aug
    2012
    11:18am, EDT

    Cleaner waters attract blue whales to Southern California

    Biologists say krill are thriving in cleaner waters off the coast of California attracting more blue whales. KNBC's Michelle Valles reports.

    By NbcLosAngeles.com

    Every summer, the majestic blue whale -- the largest mammal that has ever lived -- comes to Southern California, where the Palos Verdes peninsula has become a favorite feeding spot.


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    Larger than the biggest dinosaur, the endangered species can measure up to 50 feet long – its tongue alone can weigh as much as an African elephant.

    For more visit NBCLosAngeles.com.

    According to Marine biologists, the whales' migration is evidence that clean-up efforts by wildlife activists are working. The whales feed on the krill before they head off to breed.

    “The water here is actually cleaner than it’s ever been in the last 30 to 40 years,” said Capt. Dan Salas of the Aquarium of the Pacific and Harbor Breeze Cruises. “The krill is coming in tremendous numbers.”

    About 2,000 of the estimated 10,000 blue whales worldwide are believed to live in the northeastern Pacific Ocean.

    On Wednesday, NBC4’s Michelle Valles was a passenger on a three-hour blue whale excursion 10 miles off the coast of Long Beach.

    Thirty minutes into the cruise, Capt. Salas yelled: “There she blows! A blue whale!”


    The whale watchers were treated to a mother whale and her baby casually playing near the boat.

    “The magnificent blue whales just circled our boat. One of the most incredible sights I’ve ever seen. It was awesome,” Salas said.

    Whale watcher Terry Krasvewski was thrilled.

    “To be able to see one in person is remarkable, reminds you of how connected we are. We need to take care of each other. It’s precious,” Krasvewski said.

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    7 comments

    They just do not like the taste of the glowing radiated krill further West in the ocean ... :)

    Show more
    Explore related topics: whales, california, long-beach, blue-whales
  • 11
    May
    2012
    5:48pm, EDT

    Navy raises sonar impact on dolphins, whales dramatically

    James R. Evans / U.S. Pacific Fleet

    Dolphins surface as the USS Halsey destroyer maneuvers off Southern California on Sept. 30, 2011.

    By Miguel Llanos, NBC News

    New Navy estimates showing many more dolphins, whales and other marine mammals could be hurt by sonar off Hawaii and Southern California caused alarm among environmentalists on Friday. The Navy, for its part, emphasized those were worst-case estimates and that the numbers cover a much larger testing area than before.


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    The numbers are in the Navy's new draft environmental impact statement for exercises planned from 2014-2018. In it, the Navy says that, under its preferred alternative, sonar training and testing might unintentionally harm marine mammals 2.8 million times a year over five years.

    "The numbers are staggering and there is absolutely no corresponding mitigation to account for this harm," Zak Smith, an attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council, told msnbc.com.


    Nov. 12, 2008: The Supreme Court ruled that the Navy can conduct military sonar training exercises.

    That's up from about 150,000 instances a year in the Navy's impact statement for 2009-2013, Smith added.

    But the Navy said the numbers were misleading since the new area is much larger and more activities have been added since the last statement. "It's like comparing three grapes to a watermelon," Pacific Fleet spokesman Mark Matsunaga told msnbc.com.

    "These are just worst-case estimates," he added. "That's not to say we're going to go out there and hurt them all."

    "Direct comparisons with the prior analysis might not be comparing apples to apples," acknowleged Smith. "But I think that's irrelevant. ... Regardless of what accounts for this change the fact is that we -- including the Navy -- now understand that the Navy's activities will have a much greater impact than previously thought."

    Twelve million potential exposures over those five years are listed under "behavioral," Smith noted. It's the least harmful category, but Smith said it can include an impact like forcing a whale to abandon its habitat for several days. "Marine mammals don't have the energy to continually withstand" that kind of impact, he added.

    Two million incidents are counted for temporary hearing loss, Smith said, and 2,000 are listed for permanent hearing loss.

    Hearing is critical to marine mammals, much like seeing is to humans, Smith said. "It's as if some technology used in my neighborhood blinded me for the next 10 minutes. It becomes a problem if I go outside and get hit by a car."

    Dolphins are the most impacted species under the new estimates, which are based on models, followed by whales and orcas.

    In addition, the Navy estimates traditional explosives testing and training might kill 1,000 marine mammals during the period.

    The Navy numbers were presented Thursday by John Van Name, a senior environmental planner at the U.S. Pacific Fleet.

    US sued over sonar tests in whale waters

    "Each time around, each time we swing through this process, we get better, we take a harder look, we become more inclusive," the Associated Press quoted him as saying.

    Matsunaga added that the new estimates include "more activities that weren't analyzed the first time around" and "hundreds more sources of sound" from Navy ships.

    "We're at an early stage of the process," said Matsunaga, noting that the estimates don't take into account Navy mitigation.

    Smith said his group isn't looking to block sonar and explosives testing and training, but to see it used at times and places where the impacts to marine mammals are minimized.

    Will the Navy work with other federal agencies to mitigate the damage?

    "That's the big question," said Smith, noting that, as part of the environmental process, the Navy is now taking public comments and then will consult with the National Marine Fisheries Service. 

    The NRDC, he added, will be submitting formal comments and hopes that the Navy and the fisheries service will eventually have "a very thoughtful conversation as to what they can work out."

    Public comment on the draft environmental impact statement is being accepted at http://hstteis.com.   

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    84 comments

    It's incredible.... That we just don't care about any living creature on earth.. we decide who dies who lives just like that and just for our damn ego. Sucks soon we will have obnly pictures of animals cause we are doing a damn good job killing them all................... Screw you Navy........

    Show more
    Explore related topics: navy, whales, environment, wildlife, sonar, featured, miguel-llanos
  • 26
    Jan
    2012
    4:46pm, EST

    US sued over Navy sonar tests in whale waters

    Center for Whale Research via AP

    A female orca, or killer whale, travels with her offspring in waters around the San Juan Islands in Washington State.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Environmental groups sued the Obama administration on Thursday for granting the Navy permits to test underwater sonar along the West Coast -- and potentially harass up to 650,000 porpoises, seals, dolphins and whales over a five-year period.

    The alliance said it wasn't seeking to stop the testing but to scale it back, especially at certain times and in waters important for feeding and giving birth.

    Several studies have found that marine mammals can hear low-frequency sonar, which is magnified under water, and periodically dolphins and even whales have been found with perforated ear drums.


    The National Marine Fisheries Service "fell down on the job and failed to require the Navy to take reasonable and effective actions to protect" marine mammals, Steve Mashuda, an attorney for the law firm Earthjustice, said in a statement.

    The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in San Francisco, claims that the Navy's sonar use might be strong enough to kill the animals outright. But even if it doesn't, it claims, the repeated use of sonar in certain critical habitats is unwarranted.

    In 2010, the fisheries service approved the Navy's five-year plan for operations in the Northwest Training Range Complex, an area roughly the size of California that stretches from Washington state to Northern California.

    Under the five-year plan, the service said it was acceptable for the Navy to incur up to 650,000 cases of harassment of marine mammals.

    Regulators determined that while sonar use has been associated with the deaths of whales around the world, including the beaching of 37 whales on North Carolina's Outer Banks in 2005, there was little chance of that happening on the West Coast. The short duration of the sonar use, typically 90 minutes at a time by a single surface vessel, and reduced intensity would help prevent whale deaths, they said.

    Regulators are requiring the Navy to shut down sonar operations if whales, sea lions, dolphins or other marine mammals were spotted nearby by ships in the water.

    But the plaintiffs argue that visual mitigation is ineffective.

    "Visual detection can miss anywhere from 25–95 percent of the marine mammals in an area,” stated Heather Trim, policy director for People For Puget Sound. "It’s particularly unreliable in rough seas or in bad weather. We learn more every day about where whales and other mammals are most likely to be found — we want NMFS to put that knowledge to use to ensure that the Navy’s training avoids those areas when marine mammals are most likely there."

    A spokeswoman for the Navy declined to comment, saying she had not seen the lawsuit, and the fisheries service did not immediately return an email seeking comment.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    191 comments

    The whales have been suffering too long. It is something that could be controlled by the Navy if they utilized the services of competent marine biologists. Worse than the continued suffering imposed on innocent sea creatures is the coverup and denial of something that has been known for decades. It  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: navy, whales, featured, enviornment
  • 6
    Jan
    2012
    12:28pm, EST

    Expert charged with illegally feeding killer whales

    May 11, 2005: Nancy Black was featured on a "TODAY" segment fulfilling a woman's dream to see whales in the wild.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    A noted marine biologist and owner of a California whale-watching company faces charges that she illegally fed orcas, or killer whales, and lied to investigators.

    Nancy Black, who has appeared on numerous documentaries and TV shows, including NBC's "TODAY," was indicted Wednesday by a grand jury.

    The indictment alleges she fed a killer whale in April 2004 and again in April 2005 while taking people on a boat tour via her company, Monterey Bay Whale Watch.


    Monterey Bay, located in northern California, is in federally protected waters, where it is illegal to feed a marine mammal in the wild.

    She allegedly also lied to investigators when she gave them a video from an October 2005 trip, the indictment stated. They suspect a humpback whale might have been harassed during the trip and that the video was altered.

    Black's attorney, Lawrence Biegel, told sfgate.com that federal investigators are trying "to make an example of Nancy" and that what she did was not criminal.

    He told the Associated Press that Black had provided the edited video not knowing investigators wanted the uncut version.

    As for the feeding allegations, he told AP that Black had collected a piece of gray whale blubber that was floating in the sea, cut a hole so a rope could be fed through it, and dropped it back into the ocean. The idea was to keep the blubber close to the boat so Black could use a camera to film the killer whales eating underwater, he said.

    "In the specific incident in question, Ms. Black used an underwater camera and filmed the eating habits of killer whales who were feeding off free floating pieces of blubber from a gray whale that had been killed by a pack of killer whales," Biegel said.

    "She was never hiding what she did or how she did it. In fact, she was acting with the knowledge of other marine mammal scientists, some of whom work for agencies of the federal government," he said. Biegel said Black had a permit granted by the federal government to conduct the research.

    Black could receive a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and a half million dollars in fines if found guilty of lying. Each of the feeding charges carries a maximum penalty of a year in prison and a $100,000 fine. While these are the maximum sentences allowable by law, courts generally do not impose the maximum, instead relying on guidance from the U.S. Sentencing Commission.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    63 comments

    I don't know about you, but I will feel so much safer with this hardened criminal behind bars. Please let some of the rapists and murderers go free if you have to make room for this extremely dangerous person.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: whales, environment, crime
  • 2
    Dec
    2011
    1:51pm, EST

    Whale activists sue to free Lolita from captivity

    Nuri Vallbona / AP

    Trainer Marcia Hinton with Lolita during a performance at the Seaquarium in Miami in 1995.

    By The Associated Press

    Supporters have offered $1 million for her release. Annual demonstrations have demanded her return to the Northwest. Over the years, celebrities, schoolchildren and even a Washington state governor have campaigned to free Lolita, a killer whale captured from Puget Sound waters in 1970 and who has been performing at Miami Seaquarium for the past four decades.

    Activists are now suing the federal government in federal court in Seattle, saying it should have protected Lolita when it listed other Southern Resident orcas as an endangered species in 2005.

    "The fact that the federal government has declared these pods to be endangered is a good thing, but they neglected to include these captives," said Karen Munro, a plaintiff in the lawsuit who lives in Olympia, Wash. Plaintiffs include two other individuals, the Animal Legal Defense Fund and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals.

    The lawsuit filed in November alleges that the fisheries service allows the Miami Seaquarium to keep Lolita in conditions that harm and harass her and otherwise wouldn't be allowed under the Endangered Species Act. The lawsuit alleges Lolita is confined in an inadequate tank without sufficient space and without companions of her own species.

    The agency is still reviewing the lawsuit, said Monica Allen, a spokeswoman with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, whose fisheries service oversees marine mammals.

    Lolita, who is estimated to be about 44 or 45, is the last surviving orca captured from the Southern Resident orca population during the 1970s. She is a member of the L pod, or family. Female orcas generally live into their 50s though they can live decades longer.

    Wallie Funk / AP

    In this Aug. 8, 1970, photo provided by Wallie Funk, members of a pod of orca whales are held captive in Penn Cove, off Whidbey Island, Wash. Seven of the dozens of whales captured, including Lolita, who has been performing stunts for Miami Seaquarium for the past four decades, were sold to marine parks around the world. Five whales drowned during the capture.

    The J, K and L pods frequent Western Washington's inland marine waters and are genetically and behaviorally distinct from other killer whales. They eat salmon rather than marine mammals, show an attachment to the region, and make sounds that are considered a unique dialect. The whales, with striking black coloring and white bellies, spend time in tight, social groups and ply the waters of Puget Sound and British Columbia.

    When the National Marine Fisheries Service listed the Southern Resident orcas as endangered — in decline because of lack of prey, pollution and contaminants, and effects from vessels and other factors — it didn't include whales placed in captivity prior to the listing or their captive born offspring.

    They're "not maximizing opportunity to protect the species if you exclude captive members," said Craig Dillard, litigation director for the Animal Legal Defense. Lolita should have the same protections as other wild orcas, he added.

    He noted that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is currently considering whether to give all captive chimpanzees the same protection as wild chimpanzees.

    'She remembers'
    The Miami Seaquarium declined to comment on the lawsuit. It issued a statement saying Lolita is active, healthy, well-cared for and plays an important role in educating the public about the need to conserve the species. Lolita has learned to trust humans completely, the statement says, and "this longstanding behavioral trust would be dangerous for her if she were returned to Puget Sound, where commercial boat traffic and human activity are heavy, pollution is a serious issue and the killer whale population has been listed as an endangered species."

    Howard Garrett, co-founder of the nonprofit Orca Network based on Whidbey Island, Wash., said returning her to Northwest waters is the right thing to do. It would be healthier for her, and allow her to rebuild family bonds with the L pod.

    "She remembers where she came from. I think she will remember her water and her family," said Garrett, who has spent years advocating for her release and whose group plans to help Lolita transition back to Northwest waters.

    Munro joined the lawsuit because she believes Lolita deserves to retire and return to the Puget Sound, where she can swim naturally and attempt to reunite with her family.

    She became an advocate for the majestic creatures, after witnessing a "very violent, distressing scene" of orcas being torn from their pods while out sailing in 1976. The captors used explosives, boats and seaplanes to chase the animals into shallower waters and netted them, she said.

    "They were taking these orcas away purely for money and profit, because they make huge amounts of money from whale shows. They (orcas) don't belong in these aquariums," she said, adding "Lolita deserves to come back."

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    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    87 comments

    You morons! Any animal that has been hand fed for 40 years is not capable of fending for itself in the wild! Further, this whale would expect that kind of treatment from a boatload of murderers with harpoons.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: act, whales, endangered-species, orcas, lolita, miami-seaquarium

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