scorecard
  1. Home
  2. Science
  3. news
  4. Orcas were spotted swimming unusually close to Massachusetts

Orcas were spotted swimming unusually close to Massachusetts

Rebecca Harrington   

Orcas were spotted swimming unusually close to Massachusetts
LifeScience2 min read
  • New England Aquarium scientists photographed four orcas near Nantucket on Sunday.
  • Orcas have been behind a spate of recent boat attacks near Spain.

Scientists from the New England Aquarium photographed four orcas swimming 40 miles off the coast of Nantucket, Massachusetts, on Sunday.

They said in a press release that it's "unusual" to see killer whales in the North Atlantic as their population is very small there.

Katherine McKenna, an assistant research scientist at the aquarium's Anderson Cabot Center for Ocean Life, was the one who first saw the orcas.

"Initially I could just see two splashes ahead of the plane," she said in the press release. "As we circled the area, two whales surfaced too quickly to tell what they were. On the third surfacing, we got a nice look and could see the tell-tale coloration before the large dorsal fins broke the surface."

While these orcas appeared to be swimming peacefully, killer whales can be vicious, apex predators, teaming up to devour great white sharks, seals, fish, and even blue whales.

Orcas have recently attacked boats near Spain and Portugal, and researchers previously theorized that this could be some killer whales imitating one traumatized female orca named White Gladis.

Sailors whose boat was attacked twice said the orcas seemed faster and more coordinated in April than they were back in 2020.

One expert told Insider's Kelsey Vlamis he didn't think the orcas were "attacking" the boats with the intent to harm, but it's likely a "playful activity that's gotten way out of hand."

The New England Aquarium team also saw 23 fin whales, five minke whales, 62 bottlenose dolphins, and 20 humpback whales during their aerial survey.

"I think seeing killer whales is particularly special for us because it unlocks that childhood part of you that wanted to be a marine biologist," Orla O'Brien, an associate research scientist who leads the aquarium's aerial survey team, said in the press release.




Advertisement