Killer whale breaching in the ocean

A type of Orca: the big game hunter of the sea

National Observer, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

There’s a type of killer whale that prowls deeper waters and specializes in hunting big game, research by a B.C. scientist suggests.

West Coast residents are familiar with the well-known and iconic chinook salmon-eating endangered southern resident killer whales in the Salish Sea, and the more numerous Bigg’s killer whales, or transient orcas, that ply the shallower waters of B.C.’s coast and inlets in search of seals and other sea mammals.

But evidence indicates there’s a newly identified type of orca — outer coast killer whales — that are a distinct subgroup of transient whales, and which frequent the ocean depths along the continental shelf off the coast of central California and Oregon, said lead author Josh McInnes, a scientist with the Marine Mammal Research Unit at the University of British Columbia.

Once believed to be part of the larger West Coast population, these outer coast killer whales have a vocal dialect and culture distinct from their transient cousins, and they specialize in hunting big game, such as gray whale calves and massive elephant seals or sea lions as well as other smaller cetaceans in the open sea and around the Monterey Submarine Canyon, McInnes said.

“It’s very, very complex and exciting, and we’re just starting to scratch the surface,” McInnes said.

Identifying and cataloguing 150 members of the outer coast population involved combing through more than 100,000 images and survey data taken over 13 years from Marine Life Studies (MLS), a non-profit organization, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the Victoria-based Transient Killer Whale Research Project, and various whale-watching operations.

Killer whale researcher Josh McInnes has identified 150 “outer ocean” orcas that live and hunt in the ocean off California and Oregon. Photo courtesy Josh McInnes

More individuals are likely to be identified over time as research continues, McInnes said

While most of the outer coast orcas seem to stick to the ocean south of the U.S. border, 26 members of the group have been sighted in B.C. waters mixing with coastal transient groups, McInnes said.

And the reverse is true, with sightings of B.C.’s transient whales mingling with orcas from the coast group in the ocean south of the border.

“This is really exciting because this kind of shows how complex in nature these animals are, and that we still don’t know enough about their socializing and this connection between (them).”

More individuals are likely to be identified over time as research continues, McInnes said

While most of the outer coast orcas seem to stick to the ocean south of the U.S. border, 26 members of the group have been sighted in B.C. waters mixing with coastal transient groups, McInnes said.

And the reverse is true, with sightings of B.C.’s transient whales mingling with orcas from the coast group in the ocean south of the border.

“This is really exciting because this kind of shows how complex in nature these animals are, and that we still don’t know enough about their socializing and this connection between (them).”

More research is needed to sort out whether the outer coast whales are genetically different in some way from the transients farther north, and what other dividing lines beyond geography exist between the two groups.

There’s even emerging evidence to suggest there’s potentially an additional subtype of orca that inhabits the deep ocean hundreds and hundreds of kilometres offshore, McInnes said.

Little is known about these “oceanic” killer whales, with 48 being identified so far, he said.

This group of orcas don’t seem to be associated with other transient groups and are most commonly seen up to 300 kilometres offshore.

The whales often have a specific type of ocean barnacle on their dorsal fin and tell-tale bite marks and scarring from a small parasitic shark with razor-sharp teeth called the cookie cutter shark, which frequents deep, warm ocean waters far from shore.

These killer whales may form a population of their own, or they may be part of a transient orca community, said McInnes, noting it’s difficult to study killer whales given their speed and the distances they travel.

But more research is needed to study all orcas and their possible subgroups, he stressed.

“Understanding the population dynamics or community structure of a species is so important, McInnes said.

“Because it helps us set up specific management plans to protect killer whales — apex predators that are very beneficial to marine ecosystems.”

Top photo credit: An outer coast transient killer whale (OCT030B) leaps from the water in a high-speed hunt of a Pacific white-sided dolphin in Monterey Bay, Calif. Photograph by Selena Rivera