The same whale that made world headlines in 2018 for pushing her dead newborn calf around for 17 days, has now spent at least ...
Mother orca Tahlequah has been carrying her dead calf, a daughter, for at least 11 days, according to local news outlets.
The Center for Whale Research first became aware of the new calf, named J61, on Dec. 20 Maya Sears, NMFS/NOAA Permit 27052 Tahlequah, the killer whale who carried her dead calf and swam with him ...
This story was originally published on MyNorthwest.com. There is exciting news for the orca community as a new calf has been spotted swimming in the Salish Sea. According to a Facebook post by the ...
Whale watchers were relieved to see a baby orca off the Kitsap Peninsula’s Point No Point Monday afternoon. They mistakenly believed it was J61, the newest member of the Northwest’s endangered ...
In December, news broke that Tahlequah, the orca who famously carried her dead calf for 17 days, had given birth. Sadly, it appears that the new calf has died. The post Tahlequah the Orca Has Lost ...
Tahlequah, the mother orca denoted as J35 who captured hearts worldwide in 2018 by carrying her dead calf for 17 days and over 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers), is once again displaying a similar act of ...
There is exciting news for the orca community as a new calf has been spotted swimming in the Salish Sea. According to a Facebook post by the Orca Conservancy on Tuesday, the Center for Whale ...
The end of 2024 and beginning of 2025 brought some bittersweet calf news as well as an exciting update for the community that follows Southern Resident killer whales, also known as orcas.
An orca who made headlines in 2018 after she carried her dead calf for more than two weeks was again spotted carrying the body of her newborn, just days after researchers confirmed she'd given birth.
Tahlequah, the grieving mother orca, once again carries the weight of loss, embodying the emotional depth and resilience of ...