Are Endangered Whales People?

March 6th, 2012 by J.H. Soeder

Although a great family movie, the Big Miracle misses the big picture.

Although for some it is very old news, I saw the film “Big Miracle”, based on a true life story about three endangered Pacific Grey Whales trapped in Alaska and the rescue efforts to save them. The unfortunate thing is that the real message was watered down and overlooked!

As is usual with scriptwriters, the story was “much to do with Hollywood” and altered from the real story. The movie, although moving and portraying the mindsets of the people and cultures affected by the “whales plight”, did touch but touch upon the realities of current Inupiat life and the lust for power by oil barons.

The only ones not really represented or understood were the ones the story was really all about – whales! Read the rest of this entry »

Category: Whales | 73 Comments »

Whale of A Weekend Planned in Santa Monica

February 12th, 2012 by J.H. Soeder

A Whale of a Time?

I don’t usually post other people’s blogs, but if you are living in the L.A. area, take a ride to the Santa Monica pier and join in the festivities:

On February 18th and 19th our aquarium under the Santa Monica Pier will be hosting “A Whale of a Weekend,” celebrating the annual gray whale migration along our coast. Read the rest of this entry »

Category: Whales | 72 Comments »

The Beginning of the End? Court Could Take Trainers Out Of Marine Park Waters

November 27th, 2011 by J.H. Soeder

Last year, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) cited SeaWorld following the death of a killer whale trainer. If a Florida court rules in favor of OSHA, employees of SeaWorld and other parks like it will no longer be able to come into direct contact with whales unless there is a barrier between them.

Although I usually write about the less aggressive whales, I by no means wish to forget Killer Whales and the ongoing saga with Sea World.

You see, Killer Whales are big business. People are drawn to intrigue and horror stories. And “Killer Whales” always draw a crowd, especially when “killers” can be shown to be playful, docile and controlled.

At least that is what you are led to believe.

But to understand it a bit more clearly, you need to separate out a couple of ideas. Ideas that confuse the issue, simply because words can border on sensational, and thus draw crowds. Crowds that pay money to see “killers”.

Killer whale jumping out of the blue water (Orcinus orca)

You see, the word “killer” usually brings into one’s mind a sinister thing, an evil thing. And from years ago, “killer” whales, were actually just that – whales that eat other whales. Recent events now show that these whales even eat sting rays and great white sharks.

The truth is, these whales are at the top of their food chain, just like we are. They eat other animals.

However, when any animal, including man, is caged and corralled, behaviors change. Men become violent. Well, so do whales, especially whales that are predators. Just like men, given the chance, they will turn against their keepers.

Tilikum is one such “killer” whale.

How would you express your rage at captivity, left to be in a room the size of a living room for the rest of your natural life?

As it turns out, Tilikum has killed two other people. But remember one thing – there are no records of wild orcas hunting and killing man in open waters. The behavior changed when forced these mammals were forced into a small enclosure.

Sea World has 25 of the 42 whales that exist in large-scale aquariums. And right now there is a move to remove trainers from being in the water with any orca. The interesting thing is that Sea World is attempting to stop this lawsuit by OSHA.

They are trying to prove that these animals can be “controlled” when the point is that having human trainers riding them are what visitors come to see every year, paying millions of dollars in entry fees and paraphernalia.

Does Sea World really care about the safety of their trainers…really?

The spark of sanity that may occur is that OSHA could win this case, denying trainers to be in the water with orcas.

People will no longer be drawn to the shows where trainers are thrown into the air, hug and ride whales.

The excitement will go.

And so will visitor attendance.

If OSHA wins their case, it means one step closer to freedom for these magnificent beings.

Category: Whales | 61 Comments »

A Whale of a Tale? Woman ‘almost’ gets swallowed by whale?

November 8th, 2011 by J.H. Soeder

Some times I amazed at the press and their PR antics.

You see this all too often. Sensationalism done for notoriety's sake.

Earlier this week, a YouTube video caught the eyes of people all over the internet world. The video captured two things if you look closely: the creation of a ‘bubble net’ used by Humpback whales to corral fish they are about to eat, and then the actual surfacing, or breaching, of Humpback whales between two kayakers and a woman on a paddle board.

It was a rare shot and actually a good one. But then the Press loves controversy:

“Woman Almost Swallowed by Whale!”

Well, sort of. Nearly doesn’t really say that she was swallowed. But anyone reading the headline bites the proverbial lie and goes to the site where such an untruth has been dealt. Read the rest of this entry »

Category: Whales | 52 Comments »

Listen to the Next Amazing Endangered Whale Discovery!

June 30th, 2011 by J.H. Soeder

This is the listening device built by Stanford University, based on orca ears. CREDIT: Onur Kilic

It’s an amazing new discovery – and invention – that has been achieved thanks to whales.

In a story I found in TechNews Daily, a team of scientists have developed an underwater listening device basic on the ears of killer whales.

“The decibel range of the sensor ranges from 20 decibels to 180 decibels in water — this is equivalent to a microphone that can record a whisper in a quiet library and the sound from 1 ton of TNT exploding 60 feet away,” researcher Onur Kilic, an applied physicist at Stanford University, told TechNewsDaily.

“At the same time, this new hydrophone can work at virtually any depth, no matter how crushing the pressure. It also can hear sound frequencies from 1 hertz to 100 kilohertz, spanning pitches far higher than the whine of a mosquito and far lower than a foghorn.”

The benefit of this invention will allow scientists to track whales underwater and the equipment will be able to track and hear other sounds in the water, such a leaking oil from an underwater pipeline.

The device has the capability of also filtering out other sounds. Killer Whales do this naturally, when they are hunting other sea creatures, including whales. And so the same theory applies.

Since whales live in the water, their ears – and ear drums use water fluids.

“The only way to make a sensor that can detect very small fluctuations in pressure against such immense range in background pressure is to fill the sensor with water,” Kilic said. Doing so keeps the water pressure on each side of the membrane equal, no matter how deep.

“Kilic and his colleagues fabricated a microchip with a silicon membrane about 500 nanometers thick, or about 25 times thinner than common plastic wrap. They next drilled a grid of tiny holes in the membrane to allow water to pass in and out.

“To detect the wobbles of such a membrane in response to sound, the researchers shine a laser on this reflective sheet with a fiber-optic cable. Since the diameter of the holes in the membrane are close to the wavelength of light from the laser, the holes interfere with the light trying to pass through the membrane, reflecting it toward a detector. When the membrane gets deformed by sound waves, the intensity of the light alters, which the detector can pick up.

“The kind of displacements you get off the diaphragm for the quietest sounds in the ocean is on the order of a hundred-thousandth of a nanometer,” Kilic said. “That is 10,000 times smaller than the diameter of an atom.”

The point is, scientists are using something whales have developed over millions of years. Our in depth studies of them have only actually begun in earnest the last fifty years or less. Yet here is a breakthrough that has a definite value to man, yet we still allow whales to be hunted and killed.

Does that make sense?

Although man has his own set of ears, is he really listening?

Category: Whales | 44 Comments »

Kathie Lee Gifford and the Today Show: In support of whale captivity for human profit and pleasure

June 11th, 2011 by J.H. Soeder

Kathie Lee Gifford and Hoda get captive Killer Whales to perform for the "Today" Show.

Sometimes I get links to something downright bizarre stuff about whales

But this link was, for me, a bit shocking. Kathie Lee Gifford and her TV comrades performing whale commands to a family of Killer Whales held in a very small tank.

Four Killer Whales. And the ‘cheerleaders’ Gifford and Hoda, demonstrating a “learned behavior” – whales jumping out of the water or whales doing twirls…

Kinda made me sick.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Endangered Whales: Military Marine Resources?

June 2nd, 2011 by J.H. Soeder

I just read an article that promotes and uses marine animals for military purposes.

Marine animals are being used to protect our shores by the U.S. Military. Why aren't we protecting them? (Photo courtesy ABC NEWS)

One person argued that this is the height of nature and science and a proper use of both for man’s benefit.

Another said that these creatures are taken care of, while being employed for  military operations carried out by the United States.

It seems to me, that both these comments are self-serving to the U.S. Government PR machine.

Why would I say that?

Read the rest of this entry »

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Whales and The SeaWorld Riddle

February 27th, 2011 by J.H. Soeder

It is one thing to promote on the web, television and cable that your organization cares about the environment and does its part to educate and save marine life. It’s another to put trainers at risk and cage intelligent marine creatures. And another to forcefully inseminate those same creatures to produce offspring for more “circus acts”.

You have to wonder, how many millions of dollars Seaworld invests in local, state and governmental agencies to be allowed to carry on the circus.

And when I call it circus, it is mere amusement for profit, no matter how “glitzty” you dress it up.

But let’s look at it in a different way. Does Seaworld really educate the masses about marine life and whales? Does one really see the marine environment as it truly exists? And if Seaworld were truly on the bandwagon to save and protect the marine environment, why hasn’t Seaworld come out and condemn those countries that hunt whales and slaughter the marine environment?

Read the rest of this entry »

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Why Do Women & Whales go through Menopause?

December 9th, 2010 by J.H. Soeder

A Japanese Kibuki playerBECAUSE THEY CAN!

Women who have gone through menopause are not alone in living far past their ability to reproduce. This trait also been documented among killer whales and pilot whales.

You see, whales and humans live in family groups, and, over time, females develop an increasing stake in helping raise the offspring of others in their community.

The work, provides a supplemental explanation to the grandmother hypothesis (Cant & Johnsone), which suggests that evolution favored older women who used their knowledge and experience to benefit their relatives’ children.

But once a female has offspring and those offspring have bred their own, all within the same community, it becomes more advantageous for the female to help raise those offspring than to continue having her own children, Cant and Johnstone said.

Their new work will be published in the Dec. 22 issue of the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

The whales’ story…

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Category: Whales | 621 Comments »