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Saving Whales | California Academy of Sciences

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    (Kathi) We got a call on April 27th
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    that there was an entangled humpback whale
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    in Monterey Bay, in the sanctuary.
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    (Narrator) Kathi is part of the
    whale entanglement team.
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    A NOAA regulated group of volunteers
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    trained to respond to whales in distress.
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    (Kathi) Usually in California,
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    here along the West Coast,
    we get eight calls per year.
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    Finding the whale is the hardest
    part of disentanglement.
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    It's a big ocean and a small whale
    compared to the ocean.
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    (Narrator) This time they were able
    to find the whale and respond.
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    (Kathi) We went out the next day
    and we found the whale
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    and we were able to cut off
    a crab pot and 250 feet of line
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    to remove the most life-threatening
    part of the entanglement
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    but there was still a tight wrap
    on the peduncle,
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    the tail stock where it meets the fluke.
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    There are three tight wraps
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    deeply embedded in with
    some skin grown over.
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    We knew we needed to get
    the wrap off this whale.
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    It was a sub adult whale,
    25 feet long approximately,
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    which means that they're
    going to grow to 40 - 50 feet.
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    So as the whale grows,
    the entanglement doesn't grow
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    and we knew that would be, potentially,
    the life-threatening thing.
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    Unfortunately, conditions deteriorated
    where it was unsafe to be out there,
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    so we headed back to shore,
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    knowing we had the
    telemetry device on it.
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    (Narrator) The telemetry device
    allows the team
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    to track the whale's movements.
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    We had to wait until the whale
    got into a good position
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    and the weather would be safe
    for us to go out and respond.
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    (Narrator) In this case, the team
    had to wait for two weeks,
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    finally tracking down the whale
    off the coast of Santa Barbara.
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    They set out early in the morning,
    carefully approaching the cetacean.
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    It's kind of like Jaws.
    You put barrels.
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    In our case, we put buoys on the whale
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    to slow it down and
    bring it to the surface.
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    (Narrator) The team needed
    a different approach
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    to remove the deeply embedded line
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    so they wouldn't further hurt the animal.
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    (Kathi) We decided to try
    an unwrap technique.
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    We saw it was wrapped
    three times around the fluke.
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    "Can we unwrapped this
    without having to cut it?"
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    So we had two boats that
    were working together to unwrap.
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    (Narrator) After carefully
    unwrapping the first line,
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    the team made one small cut,
    unwrapped a bit more,
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    and freed the whale.
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    We're helping save one animal's life,
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    but this isn't the solution
    to the problem.
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    So we share all of our information
    with the NOAA Fisheries office.
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    For every one whale that we see entangled,
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    there are roughly ten whales
    that aren't being reported.
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    This is happening because we have
    a growing population of whales,
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    as well as we're taking more
    and more out of the sea.
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    Out here on the West Coast,
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    the crab pot is the most common
    entanglement that we see.
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    There are going to be issues
    where we have lots of whales
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    and fishing happening at the same time.
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    So how can we minimize that?
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    These are all human interaction cases.
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    It's something that we as a species
    have done to this animal.
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    So I want to be a part of the team
    that help bring some solutions
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    and mitigations to the problem.
Title:
Saving Whales | California Academy of Sciences
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Video Language:
English
Team:
California Academy of Sciences
Duration:
03:06
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