Killer Whales: The Natural History and Genealogy of Orcinus Orca in British Columbia and WashingtonWatching killer whales in the wild in British Columbia and Washington state has become a popular recreational activity in the last decade. Nothing quite matches the thrill of witnessing a pod of these immense creatures cutting through the waters of Johnstone Strait or listening to their strident underwater calls to each other in their own dialect. |
Contents
Catalogue of Resident Killer Whales | 41 |
Conservation Concerns and Future Prospects for Killer Whales | 97 |
Glossary | 101 |
Bibliography | 102 |
Other Resources | 103 |
Photographic Credits | 104 |
Common terms and phrases
A-Clan A5 Pod acoustic activity Aquarium Marine Science Barrett-Lennard behaviour Bight Michael Bigg birth boat British Columbia calf calves Campbell River catalogue clan coastal waters Columbia and Washington discrete calls distinctive dive dorsal fin echolocation Ecological Reserve encounters female fish Fisheries foraging genealogy genetic group of whales Haro Strait hydrophones identified Johnstone Strait juvenile killer whale population killer whales Orcinus located marine mammals mating matri matriarch Matriline mother northern resident offspring P.O. Box PCBs prey probably Queen Charlotte Islands range recent resi resident killer whales resident societies residents and transients Robson Bight Michael saddle patch salmon San Juan Island seen sidebar social structure Sound southern community species Strait of Georgia subpods surface Telegraph Cove tion transient killer whales typically underwater Vancouver Aquarium Vancouver Island vessels waters of British Website western Johnstone Strait Whale Research whale watching whales in British whales Orcinus orca