Date: January 10, 2019
Source: Oregon State University
Researchers
from Mexico and the United States have concluded that a population of fin
whales in the rich Gulf of California ecosystem may live there year-round -- an
unusual circumstance for a whale species known to migrate across ocean basins.
What
makes the discovery even more unusual, researchers note, is that they
identified the pattern of movement of the fin whales, which are the second
largest whale species in the world, using a satellite tracking data set from
2001. Oregon State University professor Bruce Mate, director of OSU's Marine
Mammal Institute and co-author on the study, tagged 11 whales that year and was
able to record the movements of nine of them for up to a year.
Since
then, the OSU scientists have worked with colleagues in Mexico to further study
the whales, in the process identifying via a 2011 photograph at least one
female fin whale from the 2001 study -- this time, with a calf, indicating the
whales may even stay in the region for breeding and calving.
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