Dear MARMAMers,

My coauthors and I are excited to share our new publication on the
extralimital sightings of a gray whale in the Northwest Atlantic.

O'Brien, O., Laemmle, K., Jackson, K., McKenna, K., Hsu, S., & Redfern, J.
(2025). Extralimital sightings of a gray whale in the western North
Atlantic. *Endangered Species Research*, *58*, 61-66.

The article can be reached here: https://doi.org/10.3354/esr01438

ABSTRACT:

Gray whales *Eschrichtius robustus* are High Arctic migrants that primarily
inhabit the North Pacific Ocean. Gray whales have been extirpated from the
North Atlantic Ocean since at least the middle of the 18th century.
However, in the past 15 yr, there have been at least 4 gray whales sighted
in the Atlantic Ocean or Mediterranean Sea. These sightings have been
attributed to declining sea ice in the Arctic Ocean, which has created a
navigable path from the North Pacific to the North Atlantic. The first 3
vagrant gray whales were first sighted in boreal spring, on the eastern
side of the Atlantic, and were not in good health. We report on a fourth
gray whale sighted twice in the western North Atlantic at the beginning and
end of boreal winter: first on 19 December 2023 in the southeastern USA
(off Florida), and second on 1 March 2024 in the northeastern USA (off
Massachusetts). These sightings occurred outside of the geographic and
temporal pattern of previous vagrant gray whale sightings. The whale
appeared to be in fair condition and may have been feeding during the
second sighting. This sighting adds to a growing list of recent sightings
in the Atlantic and Mediterranean and demonstrates that gray whales may be
able to survive in the western North Atlantic for at least short periods of
time. Gray whales represent an important ecosystem sentinel: future
Atlantic sightings remain possible if there continue to be navigable
channels in the Arctic.


Best,

Orla

Orla O’Brien

Research Scientist

*Anderson Cabot Center for Ocean Life at the New England Aquarium
<https://www.neaq.org/conservation-and-research/anderson-cabot-center-for-ocean-life/>*

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PhD Student, School for the Environment

University of Massachusetts, Boston

914-282-0708

She/her/hers
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