map orca attacks
A map of aggressive orca incidents off the
northwest coast of Spain during August 2022. Image: Atlantic Orca Working Group
Killer Whales Attacking Boats off the Coast of
Portugal: What’s Going On?
August 16,
2022
Andrew
McLemore
Scientists
seek to understand the increase in orca aggression toward boats.
https://explorersweb.com/killer-whales-attacking-boats-in-portugal/
An increase
in killer whale attacks on small boats has caused scientists to reconsider how
people should interact with these apex predators.
Officials
have now recorded numerous orca attacks on vessels along the coast of Spain and
Portugal. Although scientists believe the whales might just be “playing,” the
consequences have been very real.
The two
latest incidents occurred on the same day, July 31, and likely from the same
pod of orcas.
The first
incident, which local Portuguese media described as “very much worse than
usual”, involved orcas ramming a small sailboat about 11km off the coast of
Sines, The Sun reported. When the vessel started to sink, the five tourists
escaped on life rafts and radioed for help. A fishing boat eventually rescued
them.
Just hours
later in the same area, orcas butted another small sailing boat with two men on
board, The Portugal Resident reported. The men were asleep when the whales hit
the boat and bit the rudder, leaving it immobile.
“The boat
was later towed to dry dock, as concern among the sailing fraternity about
these incidents is rising,” the article said.
Increasing
incidence
Encounters
between orcas and fishing boats along the Spanish coast began in the summer of
2020, Spanish News Today reported. In about a year, the country recorded 236
such interactions, with 20 percent occurring in the Strait of Gibraltar.
Marine scientists
pointed out that “there has never been an attack or death,” as in an encounter
where an orca has acted violently toward a human. However, these incidents has
caused wildlife experts to rethink their advice for sailors and tourists.
New recommendations
To find
solutions, wildlife experts joined with the Spanish and Portuguese governments
to form the Atlantic Orca Working Group. The organization investigates these
new animal-boat interactions and offers advice on best practices.
Last week,
biologist Alfredo Lopez presented new advice about how vessels can minimize the
damage these encounters cause. Originally published as an opinion column in
Portuguese, the English translation can be found here.
It’s likely
impossible to fully avoid the encounters with orcas, Lopez said. The whales’
behavior could be self-induced or obsessive, based on a “hostile situation in
which some specimens had a bad time in front of a sailboat,” he said.
“The
working group proposed an action protocol, consisting of stopping or reducing
the speed of the vessel, leaving the rudder free, and turning off the
electronics with the exception of the radio, given that we interpret that speed
is a motivation for cetaceans and for the orcas in particular,” wrote Lopez,
who works for the Coordinator for the Study of Marine Mammals (CEMMA). “The use
of the protocol does not eliminate the interaction, but in most cases, it is
shorter and less intense.”
Should
kayakers worry?
Far from
the Atlantic coast of Spain, kayakers on the west coast of North America have
long enjoyed orca sightings.
It’s one of
the most treasured experiences for many sea kayakers, leading to the obvious
question: Should they begin to worry?
According
to marine biologist Deanna Marie Spitzer, there’s no need for concern just yet.
The bizarre new behavior that orcas have displayed has remained limited to the
waters off Spain and Portugal, and could just be a single pod of individuals.
“They
learned this behavior and have been having some fun,” said Spitzer, a marine
biologist with the Institute of Marine Research in Norway. “Nobody knows why.
Hunting practice is one theory…It seems to be quite aggressive, but the same
group is doing it. So far, it’s not been seen elsewhere. They still swim with
the orcas here in Norway without any concern.”

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