The Center of Whale Research and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) witnessed the mother carrying her deceased child on her nose across Puget Sound. Scient ...
An orca that carried her dead calf for 17 days in 2018 seems to be repeating the behavior with a newly deceased baby whale. Researchers say it's a show of grief.
Tragically, by New Year’s Eve, the calf was confirmed dead, he said. Researchers have reported as of January 5 that Tahlequah is still carrying the calf, said Dr. Brad Hanson, a wildlife biologist ...
The entire team at the Center for Whale Research is deeply saddened by this news and we will continue to provide updates when we can.” ...
In 2018, an orca in Washington dubbed J35 by scientists made global headlines when she carried her dead baby on her nose for 17 days. The same orca has just lost another calf.
In December, news broke that Tahlequah, the orca who famously carried her dead calf for 17 days, had given birth. Sadly, it appears that the new calf has died. The post Tahlequah the Orca Has Lost ...
The outlet reports that Brad Hanson, a biologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Northwest Region in Seattle, was "on the water with other researchers for a health survey ...
Palmer’s city council has approved a new study for parking and pedestrian and bicycle access in its downtown core. Parking ...
A 400-pound, 7-foot-long, orange-and-black newborn may have already set the record for Kitsap’s largest baby of the year, but ...
"We were able to confirm that J31 had in fact lost the calf and she was pushing it around on her head, much like what was happening in 2018," Brad Hanson, a research scientist with the NOAA ...