Tahlequah, the Southern Resident orca who carried her dead calf for 17 days in 2018, is mourning the loss of another newborn, ...
An endangered orca mother has been carrying her dead newborn calf on her snout for nearly a week around Washington’s Puget ...
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.
The 20-year-old whale mothers, named Blackheart and Caterpillar, were seen Dec. 30 near Ponte Vedra Beach, a suburb of ...
By recording the whales for years, researchers discovered new information about their weight changes and birth rates.
The mama orca, named J35 by researchers, was unable to let her calf go in 2018 ... In 2020 J35 was seen with another newborn. The mother whale is part of a critically endangered pod of whales ...
The Center for Whale Research said in a post on Facebook that they were able to photograph the calf’s underside, “confirming that the calf is a female.”The mother first made headlines in ...
assign a designation for the new whale, and confidently determine who the mother of a calf is," the center said in a Facebook post. Related Orca splashes poop into audience at SeaWorld San Antonio ...
A killer whale mother who carried her dead calf for 17 days in an apparent show of grief has given birth to a new calf, scientists have said. The orca, named Tahlequah and known to researchers as ...
The Center for Whale Research said in a post on Facebook that they were able to photograph the calf’s underside, “confirming that the calf is a female.”The mother first made headlines in 2018 when she ...