Dear Colleagues,

On behalf of my co-authors, I am very pleased to announce that our new 
publication titled: Transient Killer Whales of central and northern California 
and Oregon: A Catalog of Photo-Identified Individuals has been published today 
as part of the NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service Technical Memorandum 
series.


McInnes, Josh D., Chelsea R. Mathieson, Peggy J. West-Stap, Stephanie L. 
Marcos, Victoria L. Wade, Paula A. Olson, and Andrew W. Trites. 2021. Transient 
killer whales of central and northern California and Oregon: A catalog of 
photo-identified individuals. U.S. Department of Commerce, NOAA Technical 
Memorandum NMFS-SWFSC-644. https://doi.org/10.25923/60y3-5m49


The publication is open access and can be found at the following NOAA Southwest 
Fisheries Science Center link: 
https://swfsc-publications.fisheries.noaa.gov/publications/?search=Transient+Killer+Whales+of+central+and+northern+California+and+Oregon&year=2021


Abstract: Photo-identification studies of transient killer whales (Orcinus 
orca) off western North America have primarily been conducted in the coastal 
inland waterways of Washington State, British Columbia, and southeastern 
Alaska. Less is known about transient killer whales along the outer coast and 
offshore waters of Oregon and central and northern California. We examined 13 
years of photo-identification data to identify individuals and obtain a minimum 
census for this region, and to summarize information that could be useful for 
evaluating a hypothesis that whales using this area belong to a distinct 
assemblage. Data contributions came from opportunistic marine mammal surveys, 
whale watch ecotours, and dedicated line transect surveys. Transient killer 
whale photographs were obtained from 146 encounters between 2006–2018. These 
included 136 encounters in Monterey Bay, California, 5 encounters off central 
and northern California, and 5 encounters off Oregon. The number of unique 
individuals seen during this time totaled 155, of which 150 were considered to 
be alive (as of 2018). These included 34 adult males, 51 adult females, 24 
sub-adults, and 41 juveniles. Through repeated observations of association 
patterns, a total of 30 matrilineal groups were identified. New whales were 
identified each year, including previously unidentified adults and new calves. 
Identification images of the dorsal fins, saddle patches and postocular patches 
were obtained. Details on sex, maternal ancestry, sighting history, and 
distribution are provided where known. These cataloged transient killer whales 
were predominantly encountered off the outer coast near the continental shelf 
break or in deep pelagic waters overlying the Monterey Submarine Canyon. The 
vast majority (>83 %) of whales identified in the study area could not be 
matched to transient killer whales in photo ID catalogs for coastal waters of 
the Pacific Northwest. These factors are consistent with there being a distinct 
“outer coast” assemblage within the west coast population of transient killer 
whales, but more research is needed to investigate this further.


Please feel free to email me if you have additional questions: 
j.mcin...@oceans.ubc.ca


Josh D. McInnes, MSc Candidate

Marine Mammal Research Unit
Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z4




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