Fewer Right Whales Born This Year, Scientists Say

Two North Atlantic right whales photographed by the NOAA’s Northeast Fisheries Center aerial survey team in May 2016.
Two North Atlantic right whales photographed by the NOAA’s Northeast Fisheries Center aerial survey team in May 2016.
Share
Two North Atlantic right whales photographed by the NOAA’s Northeast Fisheries Center aerial survey team in May 2016.
Two North Atlantic right whales photographed by the NOAA’s Northeast Fisheries Center aerial survey team in May 2016.
Fewer Right Whales Born This Year, Scientists Say
Copy

At least 11 right whales were born this calving season, the New England Aquarium reported this week.

The number is lower than what scientists hoped, as the critically endangered species faces threats from human-caused activities. Entanglements in fishing gear and boat strikes are the leading causes of death and injury to the population.

Scientists say those injuries make it more difficult for right whales to reproduce and survive.

The 2024 calving season was more encouraging because roughly 20 individuals were born. However, the New England Aquarium noted that by last fall, a handful of newly born right whales had already disappeared.

Four females gave birth for the first time this season, marking a small increase in the population’s reproductive pool. And the New England Aquarium notes that one right whale, a 44-year-old named Grand Teton, gave birth this year to at least her ninth calf.

“Whales like Grand Teton give me hope for the species,” Philip Hamilton, a senior scientist at the aquarium, said in a statement. “She has been calving for over four decades, and unlike the majority of the population, remains relatively free of scars from past entanglements. The future of the species hangs on females like her.”

So far this year, right whales have been spotted in a few unexpected places. Two right whale mom and calf pairs were seen outside traditional calving grounds in New Jersey and Virginia.

And for the first time ever, researchers spotted two adult right whales in the Bahamas. Roughly half of the right whale population is currently feeding in waters off Massachusetts, before heading north for the summer.

The population hovers around 370 individuals.

This story was originally published by Maine Public. It was shared as part of the New England News Collaborative.

Funded largely by the CDC, the new Providence facility will track everything from STIs to PFAS to wastewater pathogens — with more space, better tech, and room to respond to the next health crisis
State officials in Rhode Island hope the life sciences will propel new economic growth in the state
A union official says it wants the hospitals’ management to do better than its ‘last, best offer’
The project is part of an effort to boost the life sciences in Rhode Island