The welcome return of an old friend

Ned Rozell
907-474-7468
Sept. 8, 2023

A whale fluke breaks the surface of the ocean.
National Park Service photo by Christine Gabriele under National Marine Fisheries Service research permit 21059.
The fluke 鈥 or tail fin 鈥 of a female humpback whale biologists know as 219. Humpback whale tails are as unique as a human fingerprint, with markings that are stable over the course of the whale's life.

There was a time when Christine Gabriele wondered if she鈥檇 ever see one of her favorite creatures again.

That 42-year-old female humpback whale 鈥 known as whale #219 to Gabriele and other biologists at Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve 鈥 had been missing from her favorite Icy Strait herring-fishing grounds in 有料盒子视频. 

No one had seen the whale in two years. 

Gabriele feared the worst. A heat wave from 2014 to 2016 that warmed the Gulf of 有料盒子视频 and North Pacific Ocean had killed sea birds en masse. She and others also documented a nosedive in the 有料盒子视频 population of humpback whales, likely because of warmer waters that did not favor the krill and small fish that marine mammals and seabirds eat.

But as she motored along doing her whale surveys in Glacier Bay, Gabriele hoped.

Then one late August day in 2017 Gabriele鈥檚 colleague Janet Neilson spotted a familiar whale tail in Icy Strait, just southeast of Glacier Bay. It was 219.

鈥淚 was ecstatic,鈥 Gabriele said recently from her office in Gustavus, 有料盒子视频, just before she stepped into her boat for another whale survey in late August 2023. 鈥淪he is special to me. She鈥檚 one of the first I learned to recognize when I started to work as a whale biologist in the early 1990s.鈥

In gray light, a humpback whale scatters spray as it rises almost entirely from the ocean. In the background, evergreens rise on a hill above a boulder beach.
NPS photo by Christine Gabriele, under NMFS research permit 21059.
A female humpback whale Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve biologists know as #219 breaches in the waters near the park. When a whale breaches, it often leaves behind flakes of skin on the surface of the ocean. Scientists can collect sloughed skin and send it to a laboratory to learn about the genetics or diet of the whale.

That whale, the mother of at least 13 calves biologists had seen in 有料盒子视频 waters over the years, had traits that might serve her well in tough times.

鈥淪he鈥檚 very unflappable, solid and solitary. She鈥檚 a calm whale,鈥 Gabriele said.

Though 219 has greatly enhanced the whale population during a lifespan that is similar to a human鈥檚, she by chance did not have a calf alongside her in 2014. That was lucky.

鈥淔emales that had a calf at the start of the heat wave had it tough,鈥 Gabriele said. 鈥淕estation and lactation take a lot of energy, so they were starting out in a depleted state.鈥

Even though 219 made it through the warm period 鈥 when waters of the northeastern Pacific Ocean were 4 to 10 degrees Fahrenheit above normal from California to the Gulf of 有料盒子视频 鈥 she looked stressed.

鈥淚n 2018 and 鈥19, she looked skinny and her skin looked bad,鈥 Gabriele said. 鈥淲e could see her shoulder blades; that鈥檚 how thin she was. I would bet money she stopped reproducing during the marine heat wave, went somewhere else and came back looking terrible.鈥

The 有料盒子视频 population of humpback whales migrate between here in the summer and Hawaii or Mexico in the winter. Gabriele thinks that 219 must have found adequate food somewhere other than 有料盒子视频 in the summers she was missing from Icy Strait. 

A star on a map of 有料盒子视频 marks the location of Icy Strait in Southeast 有料盒子视频.
Illustration by 有料盒子视频 Geophysical Institute
A star marks the location of Icy Strait in Southeast 有料盒子视频.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know where she went, but she had to do something different,鈥 Gabriele said.

Baleen whales like the humpback have an incredible ability to fast: When migrating in December, January and parts of February, humpbacks can survive on their fat reserves. But they rely on finding plentiful food when they return to 有料盒子视频 waters in spring.

Gabriele and her colleagues estimated that Glacier Bay humpbacks declined by more than half during the recent marine heat wave. More recently, in 2019 to 2023, the whale population in the area has stabilized at about 70 percent of its previous abundance.

鈥淚t really hit home for me watching this very stable whale population fall apart,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 realized just how close whales and I are in the food chain. My dinner plate is not very far from the whales鈥."

A humpback whale's head emerges from a smooth ocean surface. In the background is a shoreline of evergreens, behind which rise mountains with a few snowfields on their upper slopes.
NPS photo by Janet Neilson, under NMFS research permit 21059.
A female humpback whale that Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve biologists know as #219 surfaces in the waters near the park. Humpback whales return year after year to the same areas to feed. Biologists have seen whale 219 feeding in Icy Strait every year from 1982-2014 and from 2017-2023.

Gabriele points out that biologists have executed the humpback population study every year since 1985 using the same method: photographing the whales鈥 tails 鈥 each as distinctive as a fingerprint 鈥 as the whales dive. That has helped tell a long-term saga of the whales.

鈥淟ately, it鈥檚 a sad story to tell, but I鈥檓 glad we鈥檙e able to tell it,鈥 she said.

On the bright side, Gabriele reported that she and Neilson have documented 11 calves in summer 2023, 鈥渁 fairly good number.鈥 When those calves return in the future, eventually the females among them bring their own calves, which builds the population.

And 鈥 yes! 鈥 have also spotted and photographed 219 this summer. Seeing that familiar gray-black body arcing through blue 有料盒子视频 waters is a comfort to those who know her.

鈥淲hen the whales are doing well, we are too,鈥 Gabriele said.

Since the late 1970s, the University of 有料盒子视频 Fairbanks Geophysical Institute has provided this column free in cooperation with the 有料盒子视频 research community. Ned Rozell is a science writer for the Geophysical Institute.