Orca that carried dead calf for weeks is mourning again

The mother orca nudges her dead calf with her snout, draping it over her head and gripping its tiny fin with her teeth, to stave off the inevitable.

Just as she did in 2018 — when she spent 17 days carrying another dead calf — the mother orca is clinging to the carcass for as long as possible before the Puget Sound waves sweep it away.

“It’s so much harder to see now that she has lost another one,” said Brad Hanson, a research scientist at the Northwest Fisheries Science Center in Seattle, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Hanson said Thursday that he did not know why the female calf, who lived for a few days during the last weeks of December, had died.

The mother, one of only a few dozen of its type of orca, was seen carrying the dead female calf Wednesday, though it might have been doing so for longer.

In 2018, the deep mourning of this orca, identified by researchers as J35 and also known as Tahlequah, became a symbol of the plight of the Southern Resident whales.

While orcas sometimes show their grief in similar fashion, scientists considered the time period of Tahlequah’s journey, which covered about 1,000 miles, an outlier.

Tahlequah, who is about 25 years old, went on to have another calf in 2020, her second son, which she is still caring for. She birthed another calf in 2010.

Tahlequah is using much of her energy to cling to the dead calf, which weighs about 300 pounds, and she is unable to forage for food, scientists said during a news briefing Thursday.

They said that her closely knit pod was supporting her. Other female orcas, especially her sister, have been observed to be consistently at her side.

Southern Resident killer whales, one of several distinct orca communities that inhabit the Pacific Northwest, generally stay near British Columbia and Washington state, though some swim north to Alaska and south to California.

The males, which can weigh up to 22,000 pounds, typically live about 30 years, and females, up to 16,000 pounds, survive longer — up to 50 or 60 years.

The death of a female calf is especially difficult, scientists said Thursday, because she could have grown to give birth and help ease the slide in the orcas’ population.

Many orca pregnancies fail, though, and about 50 percent of the calves die in their first year.

The researchers also spotted a new calf Wednesday, which was born in the same pod. They said that the new calf appears healthy, a ray of hope for the endangered Southern Resident population off the Pacific Northwest.

The mother and gender of the new calf is not yet confirmed.

The endangered Southern Resident killer whale population is 73, according to the Center for Whale Research.

The whales have been struggling amid a scarcity of high-quality prey to eat, mainly Chinook salmon.

The noise pollution from ships and boats in their habitat and toxic pollutants that make their way up the food chain also have been extremely harmful.

Scientists have been warning that Southern Resident killer whales are on the brink of extinction, so they understand the magnitude of an orca like Tahlequah losing at least two of her four calves.

It’s not surprising to them that she is in mourning, too.

“Over the last few years, we realize that we have the same neurotransmitters that they have,” said Joe Gaydos, science director of the SeaDoc Society at the University of California, Davis.

“We have the same hormones that they have. Why shouldn’t we also have the emotions that they have? We don’t have the market cornered on emotions. So I think it’s fair to say that she is grieving or mourning.”

For now, scientists say, Tahlequah continues to carry the calf, nudging it through the water and diving deep to retrieve it if it falls away, for as long as she can.

More in News

Shoe with human remains found on Sequim beach

A shoe containing human remains was found on the beach… Continue reading

Sue Bahl walks with an umbrella on West Eighth Street on Monday. Heavy rainfall up to 8 inches over the past several days has increased the threat of landslides in Western Washington, according to the National Weather Service. A flood watch also has been issued until 4 p.m. Friday for portions of northwest and west central Washington, including Clallam and Jefferson counties. Sharp rises in rivers, especially those flowing off the Olympics and Cascades, are expected, the National Weather Service said. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Atmospheric river

Sue Bahl walks with an umbrella on West Eighth Street on Monday.… Continue reading

Clallam board approves budget, homelessness task force funds

County OKs eight proposals for housing, assistance

Five-year plan to address Jefferson County homelessness

Action steps assigned to jurisdictions, providers

Navy security exercise slated for Wednesday at Indian Island

Naval Magazine Indian Island will conduct a security training… Continue reading

Santa greets well wishers who showed up at Haller Fountain in Port Townsend on Saturday to witness the lighting of the community Christmas tree. About four hundred fans of all ages turned out for the annual event. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Community celebration

Santa greets well wishers who showed up at Haller Fountain in Port… Continue reading

WSDOT updates highway projects

Hood Canal work expected in spring

Jefferson County is expected to make cuts to staff, services

$5.2M deficit brought down to $1.1M; vote expected on Dec. 22

Wreaths Across America tribute slated for Saturday

The Michael Trebert Chapter of the Daughters of the… Continue reading

Body found in Bogachiel River likely missing fisherman

A body recovered from the Bogachiel River this weekend is… Continue reading

Sequim’s 2026 budget is about 11 percent less than this year with fewer capital projects and a new cap on municipal funding. Staffing will increase by 1.1 full-time-equivalent employees following retirements, position changes and new hires. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Sequim approves $51.6M budget

Utility increases to continue for five years

Santa Claus, the Grinch and career and volunteers with Clallam County Fire District 3, IAFF Local 2933 and the Community Emergency Response Team (CERT) will accept food and toy donations this week as part of Santa’s Toy and Food Fire Brigade in Sequim. The food and toy drive will end on Friday at Sequim Walmart with donations accepted from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., and Santa arriving to hand out candy canes and take photos from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. (Matthew Nash/Olympic Peninsula News Group)
Toys, food to highlight Sequim Santa Brigade

Program will culminate Friday with booth at Walmart location