PALO ALTO, Calif. — One of the great success stories of the ocean, the return of the Pacific gray whale, may have been based on a miscalculation, scientists reported Monday in a study based on whale genetics.
What was assumed to be a thriving whale population actually is at times starving from a dwindling food supply, said study co-author Stephen Palumbi, a Stanford University marine sciences professor. And global warming is a chief suspect.
Scientists may have underestimated the historical number of gray whales from Mexico to Alaska, according to the study published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. And that may have led to a misdiagnosis of what is behind surprising die-offs over the past few years and the appearance of many so-called “skinny” whales.
Earlier this month the National Marine Fisheries Service reported that at least 10 percent of gray whales returning to one of their four main calving and breeding lagoons off Baja California showed signs of being underfed. Some of the whales even had bony shoulderblades.
The study concludes that the original Pacific gray whale population hundreds of years ago may have been far higher than currently thought — closer to 100,000 whales than conventional estimates of 20,000 to 30,000.
The scientists base that on how diverse the population of whales once was — information they gleaned by examining differences in the DNA of 40 whales. They studied 10 spots on the whale’s genetic blueprint.
The diversity of genes in this group of whales indicates there had to be about 100,000 whales centuries ago, the scientists reported.
If the whale population was five times higher than originally thought, that makes recent problems with the whale look far worse.
Gray whales were the first marine mammal to bounce back and get off the endangered species list in 1994. Scientists had figured that a population of about 20,000 whales was normal, so in 1999-2000 when some whales started dying off, the experts figured it was just the result of the ocean reaching its normal “carrying capacity.” There was just not enough room for more whales, so nature thinned out the herd, they figured.
Getting the eastern Pacific whales back to nearly 20,000 is “a great success story, don’t get me wrong,” Palumbi said. “It’s not a success story that’s finished yet.”
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