This population's migration route is not well known. The major known feeding grounds are off the north eastern coast of Sakhalin Island (Russian Federation), but some animals are occasionally seen off the eastern coast of Kamchatka (Russian Federation) and in other coastal waters of the northern Okhotsk Sea. The much smaller western subpopulation summers in the Okhotsk Sea. The population migrates in autumn along the coast to winter breeding grounds on the west coast of Baja California (Mexico) and the south eastern Gulf of California. The larger eastern north Pacific population summers and feeds mainly in the shallow waters of the Chukchi and Beaufort seas, and the north western Bering Sea a few also summer and feed along the Pacific coast from Vancouver Island (Canada) to central California (US). They are found predominantly in shallow coastal waters of the north Pacific Ocean. Gray whales are the most coastal of the large whales, rarely venturing more than 20 – 30kms offshore. Most gray whales turn on their right side to feed (but like humans some are 'left-handed') and as a result, the baleen on the right side is usually shorter and more worn than the baleen on the left side, and the right side of the head is more scarred from rooting around on the bottom. They then sieve out the water and silt through their baleen, trapping the food behind. They hunt seabed creatures by rolling over on one side then swimming slowly along sucking up sediment and the small creatures that live in it. Gray whales are bottom feeders, consuming a wide range of benthic and epibenthic invertebrates. If they can successfully run the gauntlet, it’s back to finding as much food as possible and avoiding the hunters' harpoons. This part of the journey is a dangerous time for gray whales as orcas lie in wait, ready to attack and feast on their nutritious young calves. Once the calf is ready and the blubber reserves depleted, it’s time to head north again, back to the feeding grounds in the cooler waters of the north. ![]() ![]() In summer it’s all about finding as much food as possible, and fattening up before embarking on a long journey south to warmer waters where it’s all about breeding and rearing their young. What’s life like for a gray whale?Īs far as the north western Pacific population is concerned, we don’t really know, except to say that it must be similar to those in the eastern north Pacific and involve long migrations from warm to colder waters and back again. ![]() Gray whales usually also have huge amounts of barnacles and whale lice attached predominantly to the head and body. Instead of a dorsal fin there is a low hump with ‘knuckles' between the hump and the tail. They have a robust body and flippers which are small and paddle-shaped. Unlike any other large whale! As their name suggests, gray whales are grey in colour – although a more marbled than plain grey – with a relatively small, narrow head, which arches distinctively between the blowhole and snout.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |