Plenty of food and conservation have turned B.C. waters into whale-sighting hot spot
VICTORIA — A rich food supply and past conservation efforts have turned British Columbia’s Salish Sea into a festival ground for whale-spotting, but the visibility of one species points to a case of starvation, an expert says.
Julia Adelsheim, a marine biologist with Wild Whales Vancouver, says the recent surge of sightings of orcas, humpback whales and other cetaceans along British Columbia’s southern coast match scientific studies that show populations have increased.
One paper published this month by University of British Columbia researchers says transient killer whales are spending more than two-thirds of the year in the area, while another study says humpback whales travelling from Hawaii have rediscovered the area as a feeding ground.
The sightings have produced a raft of social media photos and videos that show the animals in the waters near major landmarks in and around Vancouver.


