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Beringia

(4,658 posts)
Thu May 16, 2024, 10:38 AM May 2024

Orca run-ins near Strait of Gibraltar



Spain warns smaller vessels of orca run-ins near Strait of Gibraltar over summer
May 14, 2024

Following the ramming of a small boat by an orca in the Strait of Gibraltar, authorities in Spain have issued recommendations that small vessels stick to the coastline in that region to avoid often-scary interactions with killer whales during summer months.

In the latest incident, two people aboard a 15-metre boat in Moroccan waters requested help from Spain’s maritime rescue service on Sunday, after reporting that an orca knocked the craft several times, damaging its rudder and causing a leak. The people were picked up by a passing oil tanker summoned by the rescuers, and their boat later sank.

Spain’s ministries for transport and the environment, along with its merchant marines, issued notices on Tuesday urging both sailing boats and small motorboats to beware of orcas between May and August in the area between the Strait of Gibraltar and the Gulf of Cadiz.

The Atlantic Orca Working Group, a team of Spanish and Portuguese marine life researchers who study killer whales near the Iberia Peninsula, says there were 197 such known interactions in 2021 and another 207 in 2022.

https://www.spainenglish.com/2024/05/14/spain-warns-smaller-vessels-orca-run-ins-near-strait-of-gibraltar-over-summer/

Original incident: From June 2023 by Victoria Heath

A 2022 study has shed light on the reasons why orcas (killer whales) have been attacking boats in the Strait of Gibraltar, with researchers theorising that the incidents began after a vessel injured a female orca named White Gladis.

Since the attacks began in 2020, three boats have been sunk and more than 250 damaged by a group of orcas, with the animals appearing to deliberately target the vessels’ rudders.

Of the 35 killer whales in the region, 15 are reported to have been involved in the highly unusual interactions, which experts think began after White Gladis’ behaviour altered in a ‘defensive’ fashion after she suffered a ‘critical moment of agony’ involving a boat collision or illegal fishing entrapment – leading to other orcas damaging passing vessels in response.

https://divemagazine.com/marine-life/study-explains-why-orcas-are-attacking-boats-in-the-strait-of-gibraltar

I find it interesting that the whales seem to be handing down a new behavioral tradition
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Bayard

(24,145 posts)
1. a 'critical moment of agony'
Thu May 16, 2024, 10:44 AM
May 2024

Orcas fighting back? At least they're not eating the passengers. Yet.

Bucky

(55,334 posts)
2. Orcas are getting organized and their attacks on democracy are intensifying. It's high time we draw a line the water
Thu May 16, 2024, 10:45 AM
May 2024

Personally, I have no problem with orcas. But we can't let them push us around.

Wonder Why

(4,725 posts)
4. Right on! Time to bring out the big guns and escalate the problem. Where's Captain Ahab when you need him? If the Orcans
Thu May 16, 2024, 11:44 AM
May 2024

push back, we can always go for the ultimate - more oil spills and leaks. There's no way the Orcans can win.

BobTheSubgenius

(11,813 posts)
3. I think I could be forgiven a little shudder here, or a cold chill.
Thu May 16, 2024, 11:36 AM
May 2024

A number of years ago, my sister, aunt and I rented a small boat to scatter my father's ashes around this island he held very dear...as did the whole family, except my sister, who was only 2 when CIL closed access to it. It had been the epitome of a "company town," but the company treated all of their employees very, very well. Anyway, it was a no-brainer as to where we were going to do this.

It was a gorgeous summer day, and the sea was like glass. About 2*3 of the way from the marina to the island, a pod of orcas kind of levitated to the surface, slowly rising , loosely surrounding the boat. It was completely obvious that any one of them could flip the boat without any effort at all, but we were pretty calm. The nearest one wasn't close enough to reach out and touch, but I could have with one of the oars. Encountering orcas around here (SW corner of BC) is not exactly rare, and no one has ever been harmed, to my knowledge.

It was more beautiful, and a touch magical, than anything else. At least, to me, and it's a fabulous memory.

We thought it was a send-off for my father, or some other auspicious action, but had never seriously considered the close proximity of a very, very cold swim. Until I first read of the phenomenon in the article, about 2 years ago. So removed from the moment, it's just "Huh. Glad that didn't happen."

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