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(from an upcoming editorial)
We are Being Watched! The local news recently reported the formation of yet another group hoping to "save Puget Sound!" In and of itself, that's a noble goal and a worthy ambition. Our inland waters in the Pacific NW are certainly not pristine, but we still enjoy a greater abundance of natural resources than typical coastal regions with similar populations. Most boaters are well aware that our experience afloat is enhanced when we can enjoy cleaner water and observe a wide variety of fish, birds, and marine mammals. It would be difficult to find a significant number of boaters who were unconcerned about the marine environment or willingly and deliberately desecrating it. The new group hopes to raise the funds necessary to acquire vast tracts of property around the perimeter of the sound and set the lands aside to promote conservation and facilitate public access. We're absolutely in favor of conservation and unobtrusive public access, but the group's promotional theme and press releases may be designed to evoke reactionary, emotional support rather than inform and motivate the populace. The group says it aspires to see "the orcas return to Puget Sound." It may be tough to see the orcas "return" to an area where they may have never been sighted on a regular, resident basis at any time in recorded history. Orcas form two distinct types of pods; "resident" and "transient." Transient pods typically feed on seals, sea lions, whales, dolphins, and other marine mammals. Transient pods, as the term implies, may range over many thousands of miles in search of food and can pass through a number of environments in several countries. The "resident" pods, (including the well-known group that is often observed near the Canadian border and in the Strait of Georgia), typically feed on salmon and will normally establish a predictable and localized range. The customary range of the "southern resident" orcas certainly includes the San Juan and Gulf Islands, but sightings of orcas within the normally defined limits of Puget Sound have always been rare. The conservation group's claim is dubious, at best. Will sending money to the organization somehow result in the ability to stand on a bluff in Point Defiance Park and observe orca fins slicing the surface of Commencement Bay? Will ferry passengers between Clinton and Mukilteo be able to observe the graceful black and white mammals spy hopping or breaching just off the beam if the group raises the funds to buy several miles of waterfront development rights? It would seem extremely unlikely. Unfortunately for boaters, well meaning but under or misinformed citizens will visit the public shorelands surrounding Puget Sound and fail to see even a single orca. Also invisible to the beachcombers will be the elevating levels of PCB contaminants from upland industry or those suburban developments that have negatively effected stream flow and spawning habitat for the salmon that constitute the primary food resource for orcas. No one can hike along the beach at a state park and see the widespread overfishing in the eastern Pacific, or the changing global climate that impacts all forms of life on earth. The beach walkers will, however, be able to observe a lot of boats, and a potential problem arises if the public draws a conclusion that the absence of orcas in Puget Sound must somehow be related to the presence of so many boats. Boaters should be more willing to modify our behavior on those occasions when we do encounter orcas in the San Juans or farther north. Many of us need to be more appreciative of the role that sound plays in orca behavior. Most humans rely primarily on the sense of sight, and it is easy to imagine how annoying or disorienting it would be if someone were constantly setting off a strobe light directly in front of us as we went about our daily affairs. Orcas depend primarily on sound, rather than sight. Large groups of boats congregating around a pod disrupt the whales' ability to "echolocate" other pod members or forage for food. Orcas thrive in a highly developed social system, and constant "whale song" communication between members is essential. As greater numbers of us head into orca territory during the coming warm weather months, we can be better stewards of the environment by avoiding the temptation to race across a body of water to "catch up" to a pod of orcas. Scientific research has demonstrated that boats operating at trolling speeds create noise levels that can be heard by whales 1-kilometer away, and will result in "behavioral responses" at distances of about 50-meters. A boat operating at a slow speed, and more than 50-meters from the closest orca, should have only a minimal impact on the behavior of a pod. Boats operating at high speeds are audible to orcas at distances of up to 14- kilometers, and the increased noise from a high-speed boat will elicit a behavioral response at distances up to 200-meters. A 100-yard " whale watching exclusion zone" is not actually sufficient when a boat is operating at high speeds. If we resist the temptation to approach killer whales, stay out of situations where a group of enthralled, photo-snapping fellow boaters are surrounding or unintentionally "herding" a pod, and throttle back to an idle speed when a pods approach our position we will be doing what we can, as individual boaters, reasonably do. Let us remember that we are being watched, sometimes with suspicion. Some of the observers may be allowed or actually encouraged to arrive at a false assumption that boats and orcas cannot coexist in Pacific NW waters. |
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