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Fewer migrating whales arrive in Mexican lagoons
The number of gray whales making a yearly migration from the icy North
Pacific to breed in Mexico's warm lagoons has dropped this year, scientists
say, possibly because of changing weather patterns. Gray whale researcher
William Megill said food shortages in the whales' feeding grounds near
Canada and Alaska mean that some of the thousands who make the annual
5,000-mile (8,000-km) journey have departed late or even stayed behind this
year.
Other researchers said on Thursday that varying sea temperatures in the
Bering Sea could be contributing to changes in migration patterns. Megill, a
lecturer at Britain's Bath University, warned those that made the trip may
be undernourished and said he feared many could die from lack of energy on
their return trip north later in the year.
"We saw in British Colombia this year there was nothing to eat until well
into September," he told Reuters at San Ignacio lagoon on Mexico's Baja
California peninsula. "I wouldn't be surprised to see carcasses up and the
coast, because they didn't have enough food."
According to Megill's latest census, around 90 whales had made it to San
Ignacio by February, down by about a half compared to the same month in
2005. Every year thousands of gray whales spend several months swimming from
their northern feeding grounds to warm lagoons with a high salt content
along Mexico's Baja California peninsula. Once there, pregnant whales give
birth to half-tonne calves, teach their young to swim in the buoyant salty
waters, look for partners and mate. Whale-watching in the lagoons is a
popular tourist attraction. Gray whales in the
lagoons sometimes approach visitors' boats and let humans touch them.
Last week, dozens of the mammals - which can grow 50 feet (15 metres) long
and weigh up to 40 tonnes - swam near the surface with new-born calves,
while others flipped their forked tales out of the water in mating rituals.
The whales, which were removed from the US endangered species list in 1994,
arrive in the lagoons between December and February and start their return
journey in April. Research in traditional feeding grounds in the northern
Bering Sea between Alaska and Siberia shows an abrupt rise in temperatures
there since 2005, and a decline in the worm and shrimp colonies that nourish
the whales.
Sue Moore, head oceanographer at the University of Washington in the United
States, said the whales appeared to be adapting to changing environmental
conditions in the North by feeding in new areas and heading South later in
the year. But she did not believe the whales faced greater challenges this
year than in other years."I do not think they are suffering starvation at this point - graywhales are
very resilient and can feed on a variety of prey all along their migration
route," she said.
Between 1999 and 2000, hundreds of gra whales washed up along the West coast
of the United States and Canada, after they apparently suffered food
shortages as a result of climatic changes related to the El Nino phenomenon.
Recent changes in weather patterns in the North Atlantic are harder to
explain, say researchers at the U.S National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, since El Nino had little effect in 2005.
source:Reuters News Service
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