Current Events > Orcas Make Waves to catch prey

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CobraGT
10/13/23 12:59:28 PM
#1:


These orcas control the waves to hunt
Its spine-tingling to watch.
Using a technique passed down through generations, these orcas have mastered huntingon ice.

BY NATASHA DALY
PHOTOGRAPHS BYBERTIE GREGORY
PUBLISHED SEPTEMBER 13, 2023

The first time the Weddell seal notices the orcas, its already surrounded. Until moments before, it had been resting on an ice floe deep in an Antarctic channel. Then three killer whales heads appear, bobbing up and down. The orcas are hunting.

On this sheet of sea ice, the nearly thousand-pound seal would be unreachable for most marine predators. But these orcasa matriarch with her daughter and granddaughterare three of about a hundred known to have mastered a hunting technique called wave washing. The secret: working together to turn water into a weapon.

The orcas, having identified their target, form a battle line and start charging toward the floe. Just before reaching it, they rotate to their sides in a single, synchronized motion and plunge underwater. The momentum creates a wave so powerful that it floods the ice sheet, cracking the surface and whipping the flailing seal around. Slowly and methodically, they repeat the charge. The ice fractures more. On the third charge, the wave sends the seal flying into the sea. It scrambles to climb onto a piece of ice, then disappears from view, grabbed from below by a killer whale.

Its completely sinister to watch, says wildlife filmmaker Bertie Gregory, whos spent a decade tracking the orcas, known as B1, a population of pack ice killer whales. The level of intelligence that goes into making each wave is staggering, he says. This isnt subtle. They are problem solving using very complex teamwork. Theyre using water as a tool. Sometimes itll take one wave, about five minutes, before a seal is flung into the sea. Other times a pod can wave wash up to 30 times, about two to three hours, before getting the prey. Scientists rarely see failed hunts. This behavior is not innate; its learned and mastered over decades, says Gregory. Every time they make waves, it almost feels like more of a teaching experience than hunting.

But as Antarctica warms and sea ice vanishes, Weddell seals are increasingly staying on land, out of orcas reach. To track how the B1 orcas cope with a warming habitat, scientists have identified all hundred or so individuals. Theyve found B1s are losing about 5 percent of their population every year. Whether this subgroup will go extinct or just adapt their behavior, we dont know, says Gregory. But with fewer opportunities for the orcas to wave wash, were seeing an extinction of a culture.

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GoldenSun/Crossbone Isle diagrams/ 18 teams known https://photobucket.com/u/SwordOfWheat/a/9990a2ee-25f3-4242-ae79-7d2d4b882be4
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Jiek_Fafn
10/13/23 1:02:02 PM
#2:


The sea made orcas to make waves to kill seals imo

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I don't believe in belts. There should be no ranking system for toughness.
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Cobra1010
10/13/23 1:04:27 PM
#3:


Speaking of orcas. Are they still attacking boats and ripping off the rudders

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Load me into the matrix and dont pull the plug
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