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Tuesday, 16 August 2022
Southern Right Whale and her small 'white' calf spotted in NSW coastal waters on their way to Antarctica
Southern Right Whale & her white calf IMAGE: Right Whale ID program volunteer drone operator Maree Jackson
NSW
Dept. of Planning and Environment,media release,
12 August 2022:
LEAVE
THE LITTLE ‘WHITE’ WHALE ALONE
Four
pairs of mother-and-calf southern right whales have been seen in NSW
waters so far this winter – but one pair is slapping up a frenzy on
social media.
The
calf in this pair is mostly white, as seen in vision taken from high
above, reminding people of the famous humpback Migaloo.
However,
National Parks and Wildlife Service (NPWS) Marine Wildlife Team
Project Officer Andrew Marshall said while the sighting was exciting,
whale fans needed to stay well clear of the family.
It
is illegal to approach any closer than 300 metres when a calf is
present, if you are on a vessel, including surfboards, paddleboards
and kayaks. Drones must legally stay at least 100 metres above the
animals.
“The
calf appears to be white but is actually brindle,” Mr Marshall
said.
“Its
‘white’ areas will darken to grey as it ages – it’s one of
around 1-in-30 southern right whale calves born with brindle
colouring.
“This
is a rare event to see a virtually white brindle calf, as southern
right whales are mostly very dark, although some have splashes of
white called a blaze.
“If
you look closely at the video you can also see pale grey areas on the
mother, who also carries the recessive brindle gene,” he said.
The
vision was captured off the south coast recently by accredited drone
volunteer, Maree Jackson, from the NSW Government’s Right Whale ID
research program to monitor the whales.
Maree
used her camera’s zoom function from above the legal height of 100
metres to capture the ‘white’ calf surfacing for a breath while
swimming alongside its mother.
Her
drone approached at 100 metres then used a 7x optical zoom to capture
the stunning close-ups.
“Curious
onlookers are reminded to keep back and give the nursing mother and
calf space to rest undisturbed,” Mr Marshall said.
“A
calf needs up to 300 litres of milk a day to gain the weight needed
for the 5000-kilometre swim back down to Antarctic waters in the
coming month, so both the mother and calf need to be left alone so
they can rest and feel safe.”
Now
in its second year, the Right Whale ID Program uses highly trained
volunteer drone operators to photograph the unique white
head-markings on each southern right whale.
The
Right Whale ID program operates as part of the Marine Estate
Management Strategy, working with volunteer drone operators to
collect important information about southern right whales to assist
in their management, protection and conservation.
Southern Right Whale & her 'white' calf Vision: Created by Right Whale ID program volunteer drone operator Maree Jackson
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