News Release
Arctic Adventure: Following Bowhead Whales
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Relations Office
July 1, 2006
(508) 289-3340
Shelley Dawicki
WHOI scientists will be working on the continental shelf near
Barrow, Alaska from mid-August to mid-September, trying to determine the
oceanographic conditions that make this region a favorable feeding
environment for bowhead whales during their annual migration from the
Canadian Arctic south to the northern Bering Sea. The recurrence
of bowhead whales near Barrow and other northern Alaskan native
villages has provided a reliable subsistence hunting resource for those
communities for generations. The researchers are interested in
identifying what conditions make this a location that whales repeatedly
visit, how climate change may affect this behavior (e.g., more whales
or fewer whales near Barrow), and how those changes could impact
Iñupiat subsistence whaling. As part of this effort, scientists
will map physical and biological ocean conditions from a 43-foot
boat and conduct aerial surveys from a small plane to map the
locations of marine mammals in the study area.
Originally published: July 1, 2006

