Volume 240, April 13, 2023

Winning the Fight for the Lives of Whales

Massachusetts officially declared April 24 as Right Whale Day to raise awareness about the endangered. North Atlantic right whales, the state’s official marine mammal. 

 

Right whales have been coming to Cape Cod Bay in April for as long as there has been a Cape Cod Bay. These sandy, shoaly waters warm faster than deeper, dark-bottom ocean realms. In the Gulf of Maine, a sea beside the Atlantic Ocean, seawater rotates counterclockwise fastest in April, driven by river water coming off the land. Nutrient-rich waters are upwelled on the threshold of Stellwagen Bank, defining the East boundary of Massachusetts Bay and drifting on into Cape Cod Bay, where phytoplankton blooms feed zooplankton feeding right and sei whales. Forage fish, including sand lance, herring, and mackerel eat zooplankton and are then scooped up by gaping-mouthed minke, fin, and humpback whales.   

 

It’s time for the National Marine Fisheries Service to slow down to 10 knots or less the speeds of all vessels. Ships were slowed down from March 1 to April 30. There were no vessel-related right whale deaths during the spring season from 2008 until 2016.

 

On May 5, 2016, a right whale calf was found dead off Morris Island in Chatham. It was the first right whale fatality by ship strike since speed restrictions were implemented in 2008. The 30-ft long calf weighing about 10,000 pounds was the eighth right whale born to a whale named Punctuation. Mother and calf were observed swimming together in Cape Cod Bay on April 28. As a result, speed restrictions were extended in the Race Point area after April 30. 

 

On April 13, 2017, a juvenile female right whale was found dead off Barnstable, where speed restrictions were in effect from January 1 to May 15. This second right whale death was the first ship strike death documented in or near a seasonal management zone since the speed rule was enacted. 

 

This has already been a terrible year for whales, with 23 dead whales found along the East Coast since early December 2022. Most of the whales lost were humpbacks (16) and minke whales. 

 

In February, a 20-year-old male right whale, 43 feet long, was struck and killed by a vessel off Virginia Beach. The whale had multiple vertebral fractures and separations. There was no evidence of entanglements or evidence of trauma for the whale in normal to thin nutritional conditions.   

 

This tragedy for whales is linked to record-setting pandemic buying habits that have resulted in more ship traffic. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey has reported a 27 percent increase in cargo volume from 2019. In addition, ships are returning to retrieve empty cargo containers that accumulated in port and contributed to last year’s supply-chain havoc. 

The secondary cause of whale deaths is entanglement with lobster and crab trap lines. Developing lineless traps is not as simple as non-lobstermen think. Two years of research found that floating a trap to the surface is a lesser challenge than retrieving pots gone adrift in all types of wind, waves, and weather. More time is needed to figure this out before they can be mandated. 

 

Diminishing food sources are the third force quelling whale populations. Phytoplankton, tiny plant-like organisms, have been found to be about 65% less productive than they were two decades ago. This makes no sense with warming seas and plenty of nutrients washing off the land. These are the conditions for harmful algal blooms and episodic events of ocean dead zones. 

 

What has increased over the last two decades has been developments on the land, more impervious surfaces with more surface runoff following more extreme rainfalls. The infamous year was 2013, when surface ocean temperatures reportedly rose four degrees. This was an extraordinarily hot summer, 1.3 to 1.6 degrees above average. At 172% of average rainfall, 2013 was very wet and the third wettest since 1895.  

 

More developments result in more suburban lawns and powerlines with more herbicides applied. We need to slow the waters flushing poisons into the sea to restore the growth of phytoplankton. If we can retain water when it is in great abundance, there will be more water in the landscape during droughts, and more water in the ground keep rivers flowing during the summer. Less fresh hot water stretching out across the surface of the sea will also cool the ocean over the course of the summer.

To win the fight for whale lives, we must slow all boats to ten knots in the presence of whales, use lineless lobster and crab traps, reduce the amounts of pollutants and warm water discharged into the sea, and become better stewards of land, sea, and whales.

Yankee Penguin


Having sailed the Drake to the South Shetland Islands through the English Channel, never seeing land for the clouds, turning South along snow-covered Greenwich Island, we came to Yankee Harbor, where seals, giant petrels, and gentoo penguins greet you on the beach.

A few chinstrap penguins stood off to one side, looking like sentries. I stopped on a rocky outcropping while my shipmates walked on for a more intimate encounter with the seaward end of a glacier. I sat down on a boulder and discovered I had the delightful company of a gentoo penguin with his own rock. This is his story to trumpet.

Gentoo penguin hopping about on a rock with friends.

What were the Yankee Penguins doing? Are they sort-of socializing? I'm surprised by how difficult walking on those rocks is! They're easy to like :-) Karin, London, UK


As a young person who loves wildlife, I absolutely love Penguins and admire Penguins so much! Together we can work to safeguard Penguins and other magnificent cheese for future generations. Thank you and I hope you have a wonderful day! Rebecca, Ashbury, NJ


"Your six minutes plus video felt like time just stood still for me as I relaxed with ALL of you on this precious beach. Thank You from the bottom of my animal loving heart." Teresa, Green Bay, WI


Please protect the penguins and all forms of sea life. Once they are gone, they will be gone for good. They are vital to humanity. Thank you.  Annie, Venice Beach, FL


Dear Yankee Penguin and Rob, . . . .

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Publications:


Massachusetts Slow Water Drought Relief Carbon Offset Fund


Massachusetts Let Forests Grow Carbon Offset Fund


"Saving Forests with Carbon Offset Rewards for Not Cutting, Let Forests Grow Old." E The Environmental Magazine, March 14, 2023


"Slowing Water For Greener Neighborhoods." The Environmental Magazine, December 18, 2022


"Speak for the trees: President Biden should protect public forests." Illuminem, December 18, 2022


"Slowing Water for Greener Neighborhoods." Illuminem, December 9, 2022


"Top Gun at COP27. It's not the plane. It's the pilot." The Environmental Magazine, November 29, 2022


"Biden’s game-changing administrative actions for climate at COP27." illuminem Voices, November 19, 2022


"Taking action to improve plight of right whales." Boston Herald, November 9, 2022


"Revival Coffee in Somerville takes up the Natural Lawn Challenge." The Somerville Times, August 27, 2022


"For eco groups, less lawn fertilizer is key to water crisis." By Dustin Luca, Salem News August 12, 2022


More carbon capture, better water retention and greener emerald bracelets for Dedham.” The Dedham Times, August 12, 2022.


“Emerald Bracelets to Solve Three Of The World’s Greatest Environmental Problems.” by Rob Moir, The Environmental Magazine, June 21, 2022


"Of Mousy and Elephantine Cycles, Managing the CLIMATE CRISIS after Glasgow COP26." The Eden, March 2022



“Lincoln resident promotes natural lawn care,” Concord Journal, Aug 3, 2021


Zumi’s host Natural Lawn Care for Healthy Soils Challenge,Ipswich Chronicle Transcript, Aug 10, 2021


Peabody peak capacity generator need not burn fossil fuels,” The Salem News, Aug 5, 2021 


30% preserved or restored by 2030,” The Salem News, Sep 29, 2021


Pogie deaths, a Mystic River mystery,” Boston Herald, Oct 4, 2021


Remember the right whales with a special day,” CommonWealth, Oct 29, 2021


Retreating Arctic Sea Ice, Sea Ice Formation, and the Stronger Flow of the Gulf Stream” Seven Seas November 2021


"Rob Moir, PhD, Science Advocate," Bloomberg Business, April 11, 2022

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