Fewer than 7% of global hotspots for whale-ship collisions have protection measures in place, researchers report
According to the fossil record, cetaceans—whales, dolphins and their relatives—evolved from four-legged land mammals that returned to the oceans beginning some 50 million years ago. Today, their descendants are threatened ...
Thousands of whales are injured or killed each year after being struck by ships, particularly the large container vessels that ferry 80% of the world's traded goods across the oceans. Collisions are the leading cause of death worldwide for large whale species. Yet global data on ship strikes of whales are hard to come by—impeding efforts to protect vulnerable whale species.
A new study led by the University of Washington has for the first time quantified the risk for whale-ship collisions worldwide for four geographically widespread ocean giants that are threatened by shipping: blue, fin, humpback and sperm whales.
In the paper, published in Science, researchers report that global shipping traffic overlaps with about 92% of these whale species' ranges.
"This translates to ships traveling thousands of times the distance to the moon and back within these species's ranges each and every year, and this problem is only projected to increase as global trade grows in the coming decades," said senior author Briana Abrahms, a UW assistant professor of biology and researcher with the Center for Ecosystem Sentinels.
"Whale-ship collisions have typically only been studied at a local or regional level—like off the east and west coasts of the continental U.S., and patterns of risk remain unknown for large areas," said lead author Anna Nisi, a UW postdoctoral researcher in the Center for Ecosystem Sentinels.
A whale near a large vessel in southern Sri Lanka. Credit: Asha de Vos
A blue whale swimming in front of a vessel off the coast of California near the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach. Credit: John Calambokidis/Cascadia Research
A blue whale swimming in front of a vessel off the coast of California near the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach. Credit: John Calambokidis/Cascadia Research
A blue whale swimming in front of a vessel off the coast of California near the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach. Credit: John Calambokidis/Cascadia Research