This is a post of hope for Orcas in general, and, well, "Spotty" the harbor seal is on the float in from of my house again today. I wonder if that means I might see an Orca. Yeah, I figured an Orca, probably a Biggs, though humpbacks are coming back pretty strong too. For the first time in my nearly 40 years here, I also saw a humpback adult and a baby in the Straits, swimming east toward Puget Sound. We had a gray whale set up residence here in S Sound for several weeks, and they even had a fin whale near Whidby. You can tell Orcas are here in S Sound when you see lots of seals on our floats and beaches. The idea that Orcas are endangered, though it meets some people's political goals, is getting pretty questionable with the increase of the transient's (Biggs), earlier nearly nonexistent, to become the most common sightings now.
https://www.eopugetsound.org/magazine/i ... rs-chinook
Of course, you can classify fish eaters as "a distinct population", which they most certainly are, and reinterpret the Endangered Species act to classify them as a separate species in need of special protection. I guess that is fair, but you need tools that work to sustain them, and there are few likely to work. Restricting fishing and boating isn't working. What is great about the Biggs increasing is that these Orcas are eating a lot of now abundant seals and sea lions, which are considered to be the primary predators of king salmon competing with fish-eating Orcas. We saw a pod of 5 (one very small) here probably ambush a harbor seal. Not much happened above water that we could see, but afterward, the baby jumped and jumped, probably happy with a full belly. That may finally be the salvation of the fish-eating orcas, as law-abiding humans are pretty powerless in controlling the population boom of seals and sea lions because of the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972. It has worked too well. I sometimes fish in early Spring for rockfish and lingcod out of Neah Bay, and used to for Halibut. Over the years I've had increasing numbers of seals taking fish from my line, not a big deal, but annoying. The dock at Neah Bay got overrun with Sea Lions demanding fish scraps. This year there were none, and I asked a kid that came to help clean fish what happened to them. He smiled and said "I heard they got lead poisoning". Well, maybe with less of these pinnipeds to eat salmon we might finally see reasonable populations. With more Biggs to eat small pinnipeds there will be more king salmon, and more food for the fish-eating Orcas. It is incredible to see so much change in my own lifetime. I still have a few years in me, and I'd really like to see King Salmon come back. That is probably biologically impossible with the number of seals and sea lions we currently have, but Biggs orcas may be the unregulated "tool" that finally helps.