Whales are showing up in San Francisco Bay. New ship alerts could help protect them

Gray whales used to be a rare sight in San Francisco Bay.Now, their spouts are appearing off Alcatraz Island in one of the busiest waterways in the country.The whales are making a pitstop on their long migrations from Mexico to Alaska, detouring under the Golden Gate bridge for a snack as climate change is shrinking their normal food supply in Arctic waters.But as gray whales try to adapt to one human-caused impact by feeding in San Francisco Bay, it's putting them squarely in the path of another hazard: ships.Of 16 gray whales seen in San Francisco Bay this year, seven have died.

Researchers have found evidence that several were killed by ship strikes.With some whales now hanging out in the bay for weeks, a coalition of marine scientists and local officials are trying out a new system to prevent collisions.Researchers installed a thermal camera on an island in the bay that can spot heat from the whales' exhalations.Potential whale sightings are screened by artificial intelligence and then confirmed by human screeners.

The U.S.Coast Guard can then use that information to alert vessels and ships."We want the word to get out," says Gary Reed, director of Vessel Traffic Service San Francisco for the U.S.

Coast Guard."We want people to know there are whales in a particular location so they don't encounter them."Gray whales in the North Pacific are declining.

The current population is around 13,000, half of what it was a decade ago.Last year, 22 gray whales died in the larger San Francisco Bay Area, the highest number in 25 years.

The same is happening in other areas along the West Coast."We're looking at a moment for gray whales where every whale that comes in and goes out of the bay matters for population," says Douglas McCauley, director of the Benioff Ocean Science Laboratory at the University of California Santa Barbara."So even though this is just one piece of the problem, it's a piece that we want to solve, can solve."On a beach on Angel Island, the giant ve...

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Publisher: NPR News

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