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British Columbia

Researchers name newest baby orca spotted in B.C. waters

A young southern resident killer whale spotted swimming in the waters off the west side of Vancouver Island now has a name.

Scientists say K45 is the newest member of K pod, its sex is currently unknown

A small killer whale is seen swimming with a much larger one in the sea.
K45, the new orca baby in the K pod group of southern resident killer whales, swims with its mother, K20, off the coast of Vancouver Island on Friday. (Center for Whale Research)

A young southern resident killer whale spotted swimming in the waters off the west side of Vancouver Island now has a name.

The Center for Whale Research (CWR) based in Washington state says it has dubbed the latest addition to the K pod as K45 after staff spotted it in a tight group with other family members northeast of Race Rocks, an ecological reserve at the southern end of Vancouver Island.

The centre says it received video and photographs of a possible new calf in April and June, and a field biologist is among those who have confirmed its presence, though the calf's sex is not yet known.

It says K45 is K pod's first baby since 2011, when K27 gave birth to a calf called K44.

A small killer whale is seen swimming with a much larger one in the sea.
K45 is the first new member of K pod since 2011. (Center for Whale Research)

It says in a release that the calf'smother was born in 1986 and has two siblings, K27 and K34.

Scientists speculated earlier this yearthat a baby had been born to a member of K podand said they hoped the whale wasfemale to help thepopulationgrow.

A small killer whale is seen swimming with a much larger one in the sea.
The sex of the new baby killer whale is unknown. (Center for Whale Research)

CWR says the survival rate of orcas in their first year is 37 to 50 per cent. Research from the University of Washington shows that about 69 per cent of pregnancies amongsouthern resident killer whalesfail to produce a live calf.

The southern resident killer whale population is critically endangered and its numbers have fallen to the low 70s in recent years. Kpod is one of three family groups that make up the West Coast's endangered southern resident killer whale population, along with J and L pod.

The Pacific Whale Watch Association, which represents 29 whale-watching companies in B.C. and Washington state, said in January that 2021 was a record year for whale sightings in the Salish Sea.

LISTEN | Episode 1 of CBC British Columbia's podcast Killers: J pod on the brink:

Hope turns to dismay as a new J pod calf dies before researchers arrive. When mother J35 carries its corpse for 17 days and 1000 miles, the world wakes up to the plight of the Southern Residents. Some call it grief; others, a message, and the drama of that hot summer becomes a symbol of the struggle to save J pod.

For more on the threatsto the southern resident killer whales and the efforts to save them, check out CBC British Columbia's original podcastKillers: J pod on the brink, hosted by Gloria Macarenko.

With files from Courtney Dickson and Joel Ballard