During the months of September and October 2002, IFAW researchers onboard Song of the Whale studied basking sharks and minke whales near the Inner Hebrides Islands off the coast of Scotland.
At the same time, Song of the Whale was also on the look-out for minke whales (Balaenoptera acutorostrata).
Scientists have developed a method of finding out what whales have eaten by conducting sophisticated DNA analysis of their feces. No one has ever before collected minke whale feces, so the Song of the Whale team looked into ways of collecting samples. Any samples would have then been analyzed to learn more about the diet of the minke whales that frequent the waters of the Inner Hebrides Islands -- and to counter claims that whales must be killed to find out what they eat.
You can follow the progress of the Song of the Whale team's Inner Hebrides research journey through their field diary entries, below.
Monday, 9 September 2002
Song of
the Whale sets sail at 08:30 from the Isle of Muck, one of The Small Isles
off the west coast of Scotland. It’s a clear day with light winds, so we head
northwest for Hyskier and Canna in search of basking sharks.
At 09.40,
just off the islands, Richard spots our first two sharks for the
day.
Numbers of sharks increase throughout the day, until we have 16
sharks within sight of the boat. Many of these huge fish come close, and we can
see them filter-feeding around us.
We take plankton samples in order to
confirm the type of zooplankton (minute marine animals) on which they are
feeding, which we suspect might be Calanus finmarchicus, a species of
copepod (tiny crustaceans).
Some animals are seen swimming nose to
tail, a previously reported behaviour of basking sharks at the surface, which
might be indicative of social activity. We selectively track five individual
animals using the video range-tracking technique developed by the team
onboard.
We manage to track one individual with a distinctive notch on
his dorsal fin for some time. We also spot what is probably a juvenile shark
swimming around the vessel.
We take Conductivity, Temperature and Depth
(CTD) readings with the CTD probe, as well as plankton samples, both with the
sharks and three miles away from them, in order to compare the water properties
and plankton samples.
In the late afternoon, the weather closes in and we
are forced to anchor off Eigg, four miserable hours sail away through driving
wind and rain.
Tuesday, 10 September 2002
We leave Eigg in
glassy conditions and head towards Arisaig on the mainland to pick up Russell
and Kara, who have arrived on the train from Fort William.
On the way we
sight several minke whales. Data, including their distance from the boat,
direction of travel, time of sighting and distinctive markings are fed into
Logger. This software, developed by Song of the Whale researchers,
enables us to record small-scale movements and behaviours of our subjects.
Photographs were taken of the animals in an attempt to identify them
(whales can be identified through individual distinctive markings on their
dorsal fins or elsewhere).
As soon as we pick up the extra team members
from the mainland, we head back to the coordinates of the earlier sightings. We
sail toward "hurries" of sea birds – dense flocks of feeding sea birds on
or above the water -- which indicate fish activity near the surface. They can be
a clue to the presence of filter-feeding minke whales.
Sure enough, we
are soon surrounded by minke whales, and also take record of harbour porpoises
busily feeding in the area.
The relatively calm seas mean we get good
views of the minke whales as they swim under the boat, at times rolling over to
show their pale underbellies or the white "armbands" on their flippers.
We take video and photographic recordings of the whales as they lunge at schools
of small fish and invertebrates, the pink of their extended throat pleats
showing as they feed.
Russell takes samples of fish scales left floating
on the water; these will be analysed to help identify the prey species of these
whales.
The main aim of the minke whale project is to collect faecal
samples for DNA analysis to counter claims that whales must be killed simply to
find out what they eat.
Despite carefully investigating the slicks or
"footprints" left by the whales as they dive, with plankton nets at the
ready, today we fail to find a sample. The wind picks up, making observation
difficult, and we anchor back in Arisaig as the sun
sets.
Wednesday, 11 September 2002
Strong winds and heavy rain keeps us
anchored in Arisaig. The interns head off to the bright lights of Fort William
while the rest of the team collects and responds to urgent emails and calls, and
catches up on paper work.
Thursday, 12 September 2002
After last
night’s stunning display of the Aurora Borealis, or Northern Lights, we
slip our Arisaig mooring at 0700 – the earliest the tide will allow.
It’s
a calm, clear morning and we pass seals, shags (cormorants), and
porpoises as we head out of Loch Nan Ceall in search of basking sharks. We spot
a minke whale even before we reach open water, but steam ahead for the little
isle of Hyskeir where we recorded numerous basking sharks feeding on
Monday.
But when we reach the eastern edge of the island, where only 48
hours ago we spotted 16 baskers – or "muldoans" as they're known locally
-- we make no sightings. We try our luck around on the west side of the island,
and soon spot our first shark. We don’t know why the sharks have switched
feeding grounds; just another mystery that we hope our surveys can help
solve.
Again we see small fish jumping close to the sharks, and gannets
making spectacular dives. Gannets catch small fish underwater by folding back
their wings in flight and plunging through the surface. Russell takes video
footage of diving gannets and, by using the video tracking software, hopes to
calculate how fast the birds are traveling when they hit the water.
When
we find the sharks, we drop a buoy with a drogue (sea anchor) attached so
it moves with the tidal current. We also attach a Global Positioning
System (GPS) to record the speed and direction of the buoy with the current,
which may carry plankton.
One thing we are interested in is how much
water the sharks filter through their giant gill rakers. To measure this we need
to know the sharks’ movements relative to the water as well as relative to the
land.
We are fortunate to spot and record ten sharks throughout this
afternoon. But this is nothing compared to the encounters by basking shark
fishermen in Scotland in the late1940s, when large numbers of basking shark were
evident.
Writer Gavin Maxwell, who fished for basking sharks near Hyskeir
in 1947, recorded one mass sighting in his book, "Harpoon at a Venture"
(1952):
“It was a gigantic shoal ... at one moment we counted 54 dorsal
fins in sight at the same time.” Fifty years on, it takes us perseverance
and a full lookout team to find our sharks. As the sun drops, we head in a
northeasterly direction, towards Canna, where we anchor for the
night.
Friday, 13 September 2002
Are we really in
northwest Scotland?
For an area synonymous with wet summers and wild
seas, the Hebrides are blessing our project with fine weather. We return to the
east of Hyskeir – where we had no luck yesterday – and, interestingly, the
sharks have returned to that side of the island.
Throughout the day we
find ourselves in the middle of small groups of three or four sharks, including
one large animal with very distinctive white markings on its back, which seems
to take an interest in the dinghy towed behind our boat. Looking through the
clear water at the massive speckled body and luminous, white, gaping mouth which
dwarf the dinghy, puts the size of these fish in startling
perspective.
As our protocol determines, we video range track and
photograph individual animals for identification purposes and take plankton
samples and CTD measurements.
Our research is suddenly interrupted by a
massive splash; one of the sharks has breached, thrusting its five tonne body in
the air and belly-flopping back into the water. Marine scientists don’t know for
certain why sharks exhibit such startling behaviour. Possibilities include
getting rid of parasites or communicating with other basking sharks. Whatever
the reason, breaching sharks have been known to destroy small ships.
In
his book, "The Basking Shark in Scotland", Denis Fairfax reports that on
1 September 1937, a Scottish boat called “The Eagle” was fishing in
waters where “...sharks were leaping out of the water non-stop,” when
there was “a big splash and then the boat was on its side with the mast at an
acute angle.” Two fishermen perished before the “bruised and cracked”
hull was recovered.
For us, the surprises don’t stop here. As we sail
east toward the Isle of Muck, Anna spots a large male killer whale (Orcinus
orca).
Its distinctive dorsal fin breaks the surface of the water
just off the boat, and we rush to grab cameras to photograph its unique grey
saddle patch (behind the dorsal). This is the part of the body on a killer whale
which is distinct and is used to identify individuals.
After two
surfacings, the whale disappears for several minutes and we all scan the sea
surface anxiously for a sign that it has resurfaced: a splash, a blow or another
glimpse of its massive fin.
As we scour the waves, someone notices a dead
bird drifting behind the boat. Upon investigation, we find the freshly stripped
skeleton of a shearwater. Had it, we wondered, provided the killer whale with a
snack?
A cry of “blow” alerts us to the fact that the killer whale
is visible again.
This time, he speeds directly towards the boat,
submerging alongside us, and turning underwater to reveal the clear white
patches on black which are the distinctive livery of killer whales. "He’s
checking us out!" shouts Steve, from his vantage point on the A-frame. The
whale turns underwater, descends into the murky deeper waters and dives under
the boat, resurfacing on the other side.
After a couple more distant
surfacings, we see no further sign of the whale and so reluctantly decide to
continue our passage towards Muck. Local whale-watching vessels have only two or
three sightings a year of these exciting toothed whales, so we feel most
privileged to have had this close encounter today.
As we steam towards
Muck with the glow of the setting sun behind us, we are met by a school of white
beaked dolphins (Lagenorhynchus albirostris). These beautiful white, grey
and black dolphins can be found throughout Scottish waters. We enjoy watching
their leaping and bow-riding on the pressure wave in front of the moving boat.
After a short while, the dolphins head off towards the open sea. We
continue motoring and reach Muck in darkness to anchor in a sheltered bay for
the night. We begin anchor watch to ensure that we don’t drag anchor and end up
in danger. Some people head off to bed immediately to catch some sleep, mindful
of the fact that they will be awake for an hour or two in the middle of the
night or early hours.
Saturday, 14 September 2002
The morning
dawns clear and calm and we set off to look for whales in known, favoured
grounds between Eigg and Arisaig. Unfortunately, before too long, a dense fog
rolls in from the west causing us to retreat back towards Muck and the
mainland.
As the foghorn sounds its warning from Ardnamurchan lighthouse,
we sight three minke whales.
We successfully track one animal as it comes
to the surface to breathe. As we’ve noted before, the whale surfaces for three
or four blows before diving deeply, leaving us scanning the horizon for its next
appearance. This can be a lengthy wait, as minke whales can stay under water for
up to 20 minutes.
There is a chance of faecal matter remaining in the
whale’s slick, so we manoeuver the boat to the oily patch of water left as the
five to ten tonne animal takes a long dive.
We repeat this cat-and-mouse
game with the whale’s "footprint many times this afternoon, but again and
again we fail to find a sample and our net remains empty.
It is
pertinent – and galling – to remember that any of these animals we are studying
at close range may be hunted if they migrate to Norwegian waters. They may end
up on dinner plates in Norwegian homes and restaurants.
Norway kills more
than 600 minke whales every year, despite the International Whaling
Commission's ban on commercial whaling. Even if this whaling moratorium were
lifted, Norway would still be taking more than the procedure agreed by the IWC
scientists would allow.
If we are successful in collecting minke faeces
for DNA analysis of their diet, the research may help to demonstrate that much
of what the whales eat includes invertebrates and fish species that are not of
great commercial interest to humans. This may help counter claims that whales
are eating all "our" fish, thus justifying their inhumane and unnecessary
killing.
Tonight it’s not the setting sun that makes us hurry for a safe
mooring, but the banks of fog that have hampered our tracks all day.
It’s
early when Steve, standing in for Richard as skipper, navigates us to the shores
of Eigg.
This means there’s time for a moonlit visit to the island – but
the tradeoff is that we’re lifting anchor as soon as the sun rises tomorrow
morning. After three days on the boat, our impromptu walk on land sends everyone
early to bed, at least until their rude awakening for anchor
watch!
Sunday, 15 September 2002
An unpromising
start to the morning. Fog shrouds Eigg.
Up early, expecting to leave at
day break, the team are left with little to do but eat toast and wait for the
world to come into vision. Today we must sail to the mainland to drop off Helen,
pick up fuel and relish in a (much-needed) shower at Arisaig Hotel. We resign
ourselves to a day of necessary drudgery and housekeeping. When the fog begins
to clear around 10am, we head off.
The sea has many ways of throwing us
surprises, and none better than an inquisitive young minke whale.
The
"small" (around five metres or 16.4 feet) juvenile seems extremely
curious. It sticks its whole head vertically up above the water's surface (a
behaviour known as spyhopping) allowing us to take detailed footage of
its double blowholes and long pointed rostrum.
The calf has a distinctive
notch on its dorsal, which could give us a clue to its movements in the future.
It decides to spend nearly an hour with us, swimming away then speeding back
towards the boat to "investigate" the zodiac, which gives us plenty of
opportunity to film its movements and appearance at close quarters.
After
feeding eight hungry people 'round the clock, the ship's stores are running low.
Anna and Kara drive to Mallaig, a fishing town on what's labeled the "Road to
the Isles", to empty the local shops of pasta, bread and oranges.
We
meet the rest of the team, who have sailed around the coast from Arisaig, in
Mallaig harbour, where we tie up, dwarfed by fishing vessels, Caledonian
MacBrayne ferries and the RNLI lifeboat.
Stacking away 17 bags of
groceries in a 46-foot boat is a science in itself -- toilet rolls stashed above
bunks, long-life milk stowed in the bilges, and catering-size tins of soup
stacked beside Polish breakfast cereal and German biscuits, remnants of Song
of the Whale's previous survey work for harbour porpoises in the Baltic
Sea.
Despite the gloomy start, it was not a bad day after
all.
Monday & Tuesday, 16 - 17 September
2002
Monday marks the
start of three days of visits from TV crews interested in filming Song of the
Whale in her element.
Song of the Whale has starred in
numerous TV broadcasts throughout Europe, Canada, the USA, and in the Caribbean.
The scientific research carried out onboard is one of IFAW's most powerful tools
to advocate for greater protection and understanding of marine animals and their
habitats.
First in line is a Scottish television crew, keen to film our
work with Scotland's largest and most charismatic coastal visitors.
It's
always good to know that news teams are interested in our research, even if it
means a 6:00 am start and a long, cold day at sea. Their patience is rewarded as
we are able to observe a number of whales throughout the day (some of which are
lunge feeding), and are also able to film the porpoises and grey seals
which
have been an added bonus to each day we've been in the
Hebrides.
Our recurring disappointment is that -- despite more than 50
sightings of minkes -- we are no nearer our goal of collecting a faeces sample.
Even the presence of national media fails to cajole our whales into delivering
what we desperately seek!
One restraint with media visits is that even
the keenest crew can only spend a limited time with us, and so we are unable to
make the 10 hour round-trip to where we last spotted the basking
sharks.
Instead, we provide our own digital video footage from the hours
of range tracking we have successfully filmed in the past week. That way, the
story of Scotland's sharks and the measures needed to protect them can still go
out.
The state-of-the-art technology onboard Song of the Whale
allows us to communicate our first-hand experience of studying whales and
basking sharks in their natural habitats around the
world.
Wednesday, 18 September 2002
This morning,
the film crew of the BBC’s "Country File" join us for the day. Their film
is focused on basking sharks, and we take them to the tiny island of Soay, which
is very close to the Isle of Skye.
This island was bought by Gavin
Maxwell in the 1940s, where he founded the "Island of Soay Shark Fisheries
Ltd," a factory for the processing of shark liver oil (and other shark
products). The factory was only active for three years, before financial
pressures, declining shark numbers, and logistical problems forced it to
close.
We scramble ashore up the old, now seaweed-strewn slipway, where
the sharks would have been hauled ashore and butchered. Wandering around the
derelict buildings and broken, rusty machinery, it is hard to imagine the place
in the days of the shark factory, then noisy, smelly and gory.
It is now
a beautiful, tranquil spot. Only the rusting "mincers," old steam boiler
and foundations of the factory buildings give a hint of the past activities
there.
As we return to Mallaig, we spot some minkes feeding near a hurry
of birds. The film crew is delighted (this being the first encounter with a
whale for some of them) and go on to get some good footage.
As we
continue towards the harbour, Russell spots some Risso’s dolphins (Grampus
grisus) on the horizon. It is unusual to see this species so close to shore
here; they usually prefer the deeper waters of the continental shelf.
It
was the first time some of the Song of the Whale team had seen these
dolphins, which are easily recognizable by their scar-covered skin and blunt
forehead. The scarring, which increases with age, occurs all over their bodies,
caused by the teeth of other Risso’s dolphins, and sometimes the squid upon
which they feed.
Thursday, 19 September 2002
Song of
the Whale slips the mooring in Arisaig at dawn to make way out of the narrow
channel while the tide is high. Kara, Russell and Anna have returned to their
offices to catch up with other important business and Dr. Nick Tregenza has
joined the boat to assist with field work.
The skipper sets a course
toward Soay to more thoroughly investigate the area where the team encountered
minke whales and Risso’s dolphins yesterday.
A couple of miles off Soay,
Nick spots a minke whale to the north of us. We stop and wait for another
surfacing near a hurry of birds and spot a second, much smaller minke whale,
lunging through the water close to the hurry. We wonder if this is a mother with
a calf who has started to feed on fish.
The whales don’t stay long, and
we have to make the tide in order to get back into the harbour, so we head back
towards Arisaig, encountering harbour porpoises on the
way.
Saturday, 21 September 2002
This morning we
have two members of the GBR Women’s Olympic Curling Team coming aboard to
help us raise awareness of our campaign.
It is hard to tell who is more
excited; us, to see the gold medals, or Debbie and Janice to see minke whales
and porpoises. We are rewarded by being allowed to take our pictures with the
gold medals. The Olympians are rewarded with a breaching minke whale.
The
minke was seen on the horizon just by the entrance to Arisaig harbour. It
breached several times in succession.
Breaching is a behaviour common in
several species of cetacean, such as the humpback whale (as well as the basking
shark). Breaching may have several possible functions including parasite
removal, communication, and fun.
Sunday, 22 September 2002
Nick Tregenza
has built an underwater viewer from scrap building materials at Russell’s
recently renovated house.
Once we find some minke whales, Nick and
Russell quickly disembark Song of the Whale to the zodiac, where faecal
collection gear is at the ready.
The people onboard Song of the
Whale radio the zodiac to direct them to the whales. With the underwater
viewer, they get lots of close looks at "fluke prints," the slick created
by the upward stroke of the whale's tail as it dives. Other large whales, such
as sperm whales, defecate during their terminal sounding. We are hoping that
minke whales do the same. The terminal sounding is the last breath whales take
before diving for prolonged periods.
Unfortunately, we don’t find any
minke faeces today, even with the help of the
viewer.
Monday, 23 September 2002
We are down to
five people today as Russell has gone home again to catch up on office
work.
The sea is like a mill pond, and in no time at all we are spotting
minke whales feeding and traveling.
We are too few people to use the
zodiac "rapid response unit" today, but Alison Gill (a visiting scientist
and minke whale enthusiast) takes lots of samples of the fish scales, which can
be seen floating in the water once the "hurry" has finished. She hopes to
be able to use these to establish the prey species of the birds and whales seen
feeding in the hurries.
As the weather is so good, we follow up a report
that basking sharks have been sighted off the south coast of the Isle of Muck.
Sure enough, we soon find three sharks, one of which has a very distinctive nick
in the front edge of its caudal (tail) fin.
In addition to video
range-tracking, we also make sure we have good photo ID pictures of these three
sharks in order to find out whether we have seen the same individuals before off
Canna, where we were working
previously.
Tuesday, 24 September 2002
A cool, crisp
and windless autumn morning dawns and Song of the Whale takes advantage
of it by setting course for the small outlying island of Hyskeir to investigate
the presence of sharks in the area we had found them the week before
last.
It is generally thought that the basking sharks leave the coastal
waters around Britain by late September, so we are interested to see if there
are still sharks in the area. Where they spend the winter is still unknown.
Soon after we begin our search of the bank south of Hyskeir, we find
three sharks. Like yesterday, photo ID is a priority. As well as identification,
we also aim to get accurate length estimates for the sharks. This can be done
from the photographs, which need to contain three useful pieces of information:
the horizon, the nose or tail, and the dorsal fin of the shark.
Current
size estimates for basking sharks range up to 8.8 metres (28.9 feet), although
Gavin Maxwell hunted specimens that reportedly reached a length of more than 12
metres (39 feet).
We also follow one basking shark for an hour and a half
with the video range-track apparatus so that we can study its small-scale
movements. We sight several more sharks on the way to Canna; we see ten
altogether by the end of the
day.
Wednesday, 25 September 2002
This morning
dawned to a blustery day so we set sail for Tobermory on the island of Mull to
pick up a minke whale faecal sample from the skipper of the Sea Life
Surveys vessel, "Alpha Beta."
Sea Life Surveys takes
people out to see minke whales and basking sharks around the Isle of
Mull.
The Alpha Beta crew had been fortunate enough to be watching
a minke whale when it defecated. And knowing that we were interested in
obtaining a sample, they excitedly scrambled to retrieve some before it
dispersed.
We are sailing along nicely on a broad reach in rough seas and
discussing whether or not minke whales breach more when it is rough weather
when, suddenly, a minke whale breaches completely out of the water while
spinning around longitudinally 360 degrees, just 100 metres from the boat. (Like
basking sharks, whales sometimes leap clear of the water, perhaps to remove
parasites, as a form of communication, or just for fun.)
The whale then
surfs toward us and dives under the boat before heading off toward Ardnamurchen
Point. Soon after, a small basking shark passes very close to the boat. When the
conditions are rough it is much more difficult to spot animals at
sea.
Thursday, 26 September 2002
We are up before
dawn and heading offshore as it starts to lighten.
We sail north past
Bloody Bay on Mull when we spot a curious minke whale that spends some time with
us. It has a distinctive nick in the dorsal fin; Alison recognizes it as an
individual minke whale that has been photographed previously and so is in the
photo-identification catalogue. It is minke whale Number Two.
The
whale spends a lot of time close to the boat. That, and the appropriateness of
its catalogue number, make us hopeful that this will be the whale we retrieve a
faecal sample from.
Alas, it is not to be.
Number Two moves
off. It has started to rain. We decide that it is best to head back to Tobermory
and get some essential maintenance
done.
Friday, 27 September 2002
The weather is
beautiful again so we seize the chance and strike out early to head for waters
that seem popular with the minke whales east of Eigg.
We find a few
whales, two of which are very small, obviously juvenile, minke whales. There are
some hurries of birds in the area, but things seem less lively then they
did at the beginning of the month.
At the end of the day, we head for an
anchorage on the mountainous Isle of Rhum.
As we pass the northern end of
Eigg we are treated to a visit from a group of harbour porpoises. The conditions
are just right and enable us to hear and see their blows, something normally
invisible.
After the months of searching for porpoises in the Baltic
earlier in the summer, this is a wonderful spectacle at the end of a long
day.
Saturday, 28 September 2002
We wake up at
0700 and take some time to go a shore. Rhum, now owned by Scottish Natural
Heritage, is home to a lot of wildlife as well as a grand old mansion that
is now a hotel.
Nick is keen to see some deer and sits on a remote
hillside to look out for some. He sees none, but from their vantage point below,
the rest of the team can see deer further up the hill watching Nick from a
distance!
After a quick tour of Rhum we leave and head for one last
survey of the waters around Canna and south toward the Island of
Coll.
Once we pass from behind the north side of Canna we lose our
protection from the moderate seas and decide that the last day of surveying we
had hoped for is deteriorating.
When whitecaps become persistent,
searching for whales and sharks becomes difficult. Taking good pictures and
video gets hard, too. So we set course for Tobermory one last time.
We
sail in, passing Ardnamurchan Point and its distinctive lighthouse, the most
westerly point of mainland Britain. We pick up a mooring in Tobermory
Harbour.
Tomorrow we will haul our dinghy up onto the fore deck in
preparation for the return trip through the Caledonian Canal. Once through the
canal we will head south to Ipswich, England, and Fox’s Marina where "Song of
the Whale" was first launched twenty-two years ago. Here she will be readied
for her next voyage into the field.
Our hope is that the data we have
collected during the month in Scotland, on the small-scale movements and
distributions of individual basking sharks, will contribute valuable new details
to the small, but growing pool of information on basking shark biology and
natural history.
Basking sharks, although now protected in British
waters, still suffer from widespread, cruel hunting practices and uncontrolled
trade in their parts in other areas.
We urge countries to help conserve
basking sharks at the forthcoming CITES meeting in November 2002 by listing the
basking shark on Appendix II, which will impose some controls on fishing and the
trade in shark parts.
We want to ensure that the depleted populations of
these magnificent, little known, and elusive creatures around the world are
allowed the chance to
recover.
So named because they appear to be "basking" on the surface as they feed on tiny zooplankton, basking sharks like this one visit the waters off the coast of the United Kingdom every year. Фотография © IFAW/ Song of the Whale Research Team
The Song of the Whale Basking Shark Research Team: front row left to right; Russell Leaper, Irene Bystedt, Anna Moscrop. Back row left to right; Claire Lacey and Steve Brown. Фотография © IFAW/ Song of the Whale Research Team
A minke whale is photographed spyhopping near the Inner Hebrides Islands, Scotland. Фотография © IFAW/ Song of the Whale Research Team
IFAW's research team takes Conductivity, Temperature and Depth (CTD) readings with a CTD probe as part of our efforts to learn more about the mysterious basking shark. Фотография © IFAW/ Song of the Whale Research Team
The distinctive dorsal fin of an orca whale is always an amazing sight. Фотография © IFAW/ Song of the Whale Research Team
The Song of the Whale team collects plankton samples off the Scottish coast. Фотография © IFAW/ Song of the Whale Research Team
Five metres -- 16.4 feet -- long, this minke whale is an impressive animal when seen from IFAW's Zodiac inflatable. Фотография © IFAW/ Song of the Whale Research Team
Debbie and Janice, two members of the GBR Women’s Olympic Curling Team, are pictured with new Song crewmember, Nick Tregenza. The curlers came aboard Song of the Whale to help raise awareness of IFAW's Basking Shark Campaign. Фотография © IFAW/Song of the Whale Research Team
Research intern, Irene Bystedt, takes photographs from Song of the Whale's A-frame. Фотография © IFAW/ Song of the Whale Research Team
Alison Gill, a visiting scientist, photographs a minke whale from Song of the Whale. Фотография © IFAW/ Song of the Whale Research Team












