As death toll rises, scientists struggle to track massive, elusive right whales
HALIFAX — They are among the world’s largest creatures, but the planet’s 400 remaining North Atlantic right whales are remarkably elusive.
Though adult members of this critically endangered species can be as long as a city bus, their movements remain difficult to track, despite the best efforts of scientists struggling to deal with a rapidly rising death toll off Canada’s east coast.
“It is kind of mind-boggling that we can lose track of these large animals,” says Boris Worm, a biology professor and well-known whale expert at Dalhousie University in Halifax.
“But the ocean is a very large place, and they only spend part of their time at the surface — and they move around quickly, if they want to.”