A newborn killer whale calf spotted off the southern coast of WA could be one of the youngest ever seen in Australian waters.
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a science and research director with whale conservation non-profit Wild Orca, told The Seattle Times. “And here she is doing it again.” Speaking about the killer whale mother with KOMO, ...
a baby born two years after her 2018 loss. Killer whales typically reproduce every five years, giving the mother time to recover from the physical demands of pregnancy and giving birth ...
drawing attention to the critically endangered southern resident killer whales. Researchers say this behavior is a sign of grief. Dr. Deborah Giles, science and research director at Wild Orca ...
Researchers think they saw her pushing something through the water on Dec. 31 and clearly saw and photographed that it was her baby ... eating orcas, known as southern resident killer whales ...
The grieving killer whale mother who lost her calf on New Year’s Eve has been pushing and carrying the dead baby for at least ... conservation non-profit Wild Orca, told The Seattle Times.
Grief has long thought to be a human trait, but other animals – from killer whales to crows – also ... had given birth to a stillborn baby and was refusing to let go, carrying the infant ...
This week, uncover some of the oldest ice on Earth, follow a dinosaur highway, learn how Pluto sealed the capture of its moon Charon with a “kiss,” and more.
A January 2025 article from the BBC’s Jasmin Fox-Skelly details numerous examples, from an elderly elephant shedding tears ...