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5 Facts Learned From Beluga Whale Research

What research is teaching us about beluga whale behavior and how humans may be impacting it.

Aerial photo of adult and juvenile beluga whales swimming at surface. A Cook Inlet beluga whale mother and newborn calf swim through the silty water of Cook Inlet. Credit: Hollis Europe & Jacob Barbaro/NOAA Fisheries (NMFS scientific research permit #20465)

1) Belugas Can Travel Thousands of Miles from Their Arctic Habitats

Beluga whales can travel thousands of miles from the icy waters where we expect to see them. While we expect to find them in arctic and subarctic waters, they’ve been found as far south as the waters off the coast of California and New Jersey! While we’re still trying to understand these behaviors, we now have non-invasive ways of doing genetic testing to determine which population these whales are from and to monitor whether or not they will need assistance from the whale stranding network.

beluga whales seen from the air in Cook Inlet
Cook Inlet beluga whales. Credit: NOAA Fisheries.

2) Belugas Get Pregnant Later in Life

Genetic aging studies on a small number of Cook Inlet beluga whales noted that very few under the age of 19 were pregnant. While more studies are needed to confirm this essential information, it gives us a glimpse into why the Cook Inlet population may require a long time to recover.

adult beluga whales with beluga calf
Adult beluga whales with beluga calf. Credit: NOAA Fisheries.

3) Belugas Hunt in Shallow Waters

Beluga whales hunt in shallow waters where they can cooperatively work to corral their prey. This social hunting behavior is also observed in other marine relatives, such as dolphins. It puts beluga whales at high risk for injury and death if they become trapped on the mudflats as the tide goes out. The tidal range in Cook Inlet is one of the largest in the world at about 32 feet and mass strandings of belugas are not uncommon. However, most if not all usually survive until the tide comes back in.

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Aerial photo of two Cook Inlet Beluga Whales swimming at the surface.
Aerial photo of two Cook Inlet Beluga Whales swimming at the surface. Credit: NOAA Fisheries.

4) We Have a Full Genome Sequence for Beluga Whales

Beluga whales are one of the few species of whale for which we have a full genome sequence and multiple extensive partial sequences. They allow us to do extensive research on them and their genetics using only minimally and noninvasive sampling. In the past, this has included examining genetic mixing between populations as an indicator of social contact, such as between the Yakutat Bay and Cook Inlet populations.

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Group of beluga whales, including a mother-calf pair in Cook Inlet, Alaska
A group of adult beluga whales with a newborn swim side by side through silty water in Cook Inlet, Alaska. Credit: NOAA Fisheries (NMFS MMPA/ESA permit 20465).

5) Belugas Make Lots of Different Sounds

Beluga whales are sometimes called the “canaries of the sea” because of their varied and frequent vocalizations. Because of the high pitch of some of the calls they make, these sounds travel short distances. This is unlike other whale songs which are usually produced at lower pitches, in deeper water, and travel farther distances. This inability to communicate over long distances in shallow waters may be contributing to belugas avoiding waters with large amounts of noise pollution that could interfere with their calls. Noise pollution produced by human activity could be a reason that some of their historic range is no longer frequented as often.

Resources

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Species in the Spotlight: Priority Actions 2021-2025, Cook Inlet Beluga Whale

In 2015, NOAA Fisheries launched the Species in the Spotlight initiative to provide immediate, targeted efforts to halt declines and stabilize…