June 29, 2017 by Phuong Le
Endangered killer whales that frequent the inland waters of
Washington state are having pregnancy problems because they cannot find enough
fish to eat, according to a new study.
Researchers analyzed hormones in excrement collected at sea
and found that more than two-thirds of orca pregnancies failed over a
seven-year period. They linked those problems to nutritional stress brought on
by a low supply of Chinook salmon, the whales'
preferred diet.
"A large number of whales are conceiving, but when
nutrition is poor, they don't sustain those pregnancies," said Sam Wasser,
lead author of the paper and a biology professor at the University of
Washington.
Southern resident killer whales along the U.S.
West Coast have struggled since they were listed as endangered species in 2005.
They now number just 78, down from a high of 140 decades ago. The whales face
threats from a lack of food, pollution and boats.
The new study, to be published Thursday in the journal PLOS
ONE, zeroes in on food supply as an important stress factor among these
fish-eating whales. Unlike other killer whales that eat marine mammals, the
orcas that spend the summer in Puget Sound primarily eat salmon, mostly
Chinook.
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