Mysterious Deaths Threaten a Population of Southern Right Whales
| A southern right whale breaching off of Peninsula Valdes, Argentina. | 
The "mass mortality" of hundreds of southern right whale calves mystify scientists.
Surprisingly large numbers of  southern right whale calves are dying off the coast of Argentina,  sparking concerns among marine scientists and conservation officials.
Overall, southern right whales are doing much better than their endangered brethren to the north. But for one group of southern right whales that gives birth off Peninsula Valdés, Argentina (map), fate has not been so kind.
Hundreds of the Peninsula Valdés whales  have died since monitoring of their population size began in 1971,  researchers report in a study published this month in the journal Marine Ecology Progress Series. From 1971 to 2011, 630 of the right whales died—adults and young ones combined.
But 77 percent of those deaths occurred  between 2003 and 2011. And of those recent deaths, 89 percent have  occurred in the calves. Scientists are still struggling to understand  why.
Changes in monitoring efforts over the  years could probably account for some of the increase in recorded  deaths, researchers acknowledge in the study. But they can't account for  all of it.
Something else is going on that has so far defied the efforts of scientists to get to the bottom of the situation.
It's a real frustration, said Vicky Rowntree, a behavioral ecologist at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City and director of the right whale program at Ocean Alliance/Instituto de Conservación de Ballenas in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
No Common Cause
A meeting of marine biologists and  veterinarians convened by the International Whaling Commission in 2010  to study the problem settled on three possible explanations: low food  abundance, disease, or toxins such as domoic acid or saxitoxin produced by harmful algal blooms.
"A lot of our research has been trying to  look at those [explanations]," said lead study author Rowntree. But so  far, researchers and veterinarians have been unable to find a common  cause of death in the hundreds of samples taken from the dead calves.
A small number of calves show evidence of  disease while others contain low levels of toxins. Figuring out whether  the calves got enough food is harder to determine, Rowntree explained.  (See "New Diseases, Toxins Harming Marine Life.")
Blubber thickness is one way researchers  look at whether these calves are getting enough food or not. They also  look to other markers of nutritional stress in body tissues or the  whales' baleen—located in a whale's mouth which they use to strain food  out of seawater.
The timing of the deaths has both  confused and helped efforts to understand what's going on. Baby whales  in certain years seem to have died shortly after birth, while in other  years, they've died later in the May-December calving season. This  suggests that more than one cause may be responsible for these "high  mortality" events, the study authors write.
"But the timing of the mortality might  give us some clue as to why they died," said Rowntree. If a calf died  shortly after birth, that could indicate a wide-scale food shortage  problem.
If a calf died later in the year, when  the whales start to feed on krill and copepods, then perhaps the young  ones are ingesting a toxin or pollutant, she explained. (See "Sea Lion Seizures May Result From Toxic Algae.")
Analyses of Northern Atlantic right whale  populations indicate they ingest algal toxins produced during harmful  algal blooms. Krill and copepods are grazers and take in toxins along  with the algae they eat. Those toxins, in turn, are transferred to the  whales when they gulp down their prey.
"The adults can deal with it," Rowntree said. "But maybe the toxins are too strong for the babies."
Blame It On Birds?
Another possible explanation—supported by Rowntree and discussed at an April 2013 international meeting of veterinarians in Sausalito, California—is harassment by kelp gulls (Larus domincanus).
"They're large gulls and they've learned  to feed on the skin they peck from the backs of the whales," she  explained. "They make a hole in the skin and they attack it over and  over during the season."
Some enterprising birds started the strategy in the early 1980s, and it has since spread to other gulls all over the peninsula.
Although it seems that the mothers have  learned how to avoid such pointed attention from the birds, the calves  haven't. "So most calves have a chain of lesions along their backs from  being pecked by the gulls," Rowntree explained.
It's quite possible that this harassment  could contribute to calf deaths around Peninsula Valdés, the animal  ecologist said. That's the only big problem these right whales seem to  have in common that sets them apart from other southern right whale  populations which aren't experiencing such large numbers of deaths.
Watching What They Eat
For now, Rowntree and her colleagues are  looking at tracking where these whales feed. There is some evidence  suggesting that low prey abundance, specifically Antarctic krill (Euphasia superba), could lead to increases in whale deaths.
Female southern right whales depend on  krill to bulk up their blubber reserves before they give birth. During  their calves' first few months of life, the mothers don't eat.
If the mothers aren't storing enough blubber, they may not be able to provide adequate nutrition for their babies.
Whale diets leave specific signatures in  their baleen, depending on where in the world the animal fed, Rowntree  explained. "If the mothers eat in the Southern Hemisphere, that food  [has] a unique signature."
If they can link increases in Peninsula  Valdés right whale deaths with low krill abundance, then perhaps they  can narrow in on what's causing so many calves to die.
Wait and See
It's still a little too early to tell how  all these deaths will affect the population's overall numbers. But it  doesn't look good.
Last year, researchers recorded 116  southern right whale strandings in the Peninsula Valdés population. That  accounts for nearly three percent of the western South Atlantic stock,  the study authors write.
"No other known single-year die-off of baleen whales is as large," the researchers note.
Female southern right whales are sexually  mature when they turn nine, Rowntree said. Since the die-off began in  2005, females born that year will be able to start having babies in  2014.
Southern right whale pregnancies last a  year. Then it takes a year for the mother to nurse her calf and then  another year for her to build up her blubber reserves for the next  pregnancy.
So it will be another three years before  researchers have a clear picture of how badly the Peninsula Valdés  population has been affected.Mysterious Deaths Threaten a Population of Southern Right Whales