The southern resident orcas may be dealing with another death in the J-pod-- a blow to an already-struggling population.
The Center for Whale Research is closely monitoring future orca encounters after determining that the new calf, J-64, is most ...
The two surviving calves are J62, a female born Dec. 30, 2024 to J41, and J63, born April 6, 2025 to J40. But J61, born on New Year's Eve, died almost immediately. The mother, J35, carried that calf ...
While they will continue to watch for the young orca, researchers have concluded that J64 is likely deceased, based on this latest encounter. According to the Center for Whale Research, the standard ...
Almost the entire population of southern resident killer whales gathered in central Puget Sound on Sunday, but the newest ...
The Center for Whale Research has announced some sad news. They believe a baby orca named J #64 is most likely dead.
An orca calf named J64, a part of the āJā Pod last seen near the Swanson Channel between Victoria, BC and Washington, is most ...
The Canadian Press on MSN
Southern resident orca calf missing, presumed dead: Center for Whale Research
The group that has been tracking southern resident killer whales since the 1970s says a calf in one of the three pods is ...
The new baby, J64, arrived about a week after another calf in the pod was spotted dead in September. Researchers say only ...
Seven minutes into the video, the whales attacked a second juvenile white shark. This one was worked over repeatedly until ...
There's one beast in all the ocean that strikes terror even into the heart of the great white shark, once regarded as the ...
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