Humpback whales are forming super-groups

bbc.com

109 points

andsoitis

3 days ago


60 comments

grahar64 7 hours ago

There must have been so much unseen behavior when there were millions more whales in the ocean. Here's hoping that we can see more

  • sidewndr46 6 hours ago

    Given the current trajectory of whale populations, 'we' probably won't be seeing that. Maybe in many generations of humans.

    • cortesoft 6 hours ago

      Well, the population growth probably isn't linear, so maybe?

      • mulnz 6 hours ago
        19 more

        Warming will kill off most of the systems these animals depend on within 30 years.

        • vasco 4 minutes ago

          Why put a number on it? Every number so far has been wrong. Can we agree on the negative impacts of humans on an environment conducive to humanity without putting obviously wrong timings on predictions? I bet your intention is to provoke urgency but to most people it just causes an eye roll because it's not true, whereas the underlying ideas are true.

        • ilt 5 hours ago
          17 more

          And will give way to many which thrive or evolve to thrive in hotter climates?

          • netcan 3 hours ago

            In human time scales, the species which thrive will tend to be the adaptive generalists. Evolution takes time.

          • ygjb 4 hours ago
            12 more

            It's gonna take a minute (on a geological timescale) for the ecosystems to be able to reliably sustain megafauna again.

            • gameman144 4 hours ago
              11 more

              Given that we support megafauna today, could you explain why? Legitimately asking, since I don't see a reason they couldn't adapt just as well.

              • gdupont 4 hours ago
                10 more

                Because evolution is slow and the climate change is going fast.

                • ilt 3 hours ago
                  5 more

                  Evolution has been found to be happening 2-4 times faster than the rate earlier thought: https://news-archive.exeter.ac.uk/2022/may/articles/fuelofev...

                  • sailingparrot 2 hours ago
                    4 more

                    We would need 1000x faster, so that doesn’t really change anything.

                    • TeMPOraL an hour ago
                      3 more

                      It could easily become this fast or even faster, if we would just stop worrying so much about "playing god" and focus instead on getting good at this job. We don't have much time for this either, as AI is on the trajectory to take over that mantle in the next decade or three, whether we like it or not.

                      But seriously, we may not have much choice. Natural evolution stopped being able to adapt to environmental changes after it created us; genetic engineering is essentially the only way to make biology adaptable enough again.

                      • vasco a few seconds ago

                        The next question is which traits to do you choose and the next question is which traits are better, because choices will imply ordering, and then you open a big can of worms that last time killed millions of people. So maybe there's other ways to avoid doom that didn't create doom last time we went down the path.

                      • kakacik 7 minutes ago

                        Unpopular opinion for obvious reasons, but probably the only realistic one apart from just witnessing one extinction after another. Pollution and climate change aint going anywhere until we elevate whole world to the level of say western Europe.

                        But since we humans are pretty arrogant with our wisdom and lack long term patience, I can see many ways where well-intended meddling can end up in catastrophe overall.

                • timschmidt 4 hours ago
                  4 more

                  Evolution of small things like algae and the krill which feed on it and feed the whale is quite fast. Single celled organisms reproduce on the scale of 20 minutes and hold immense amounts of genetic diversity in their populations to facilitate the success of a better adapted line almost immediately. Additionally, they are adept at horizontal gene transfer from other well-adapted organisms.

                  • kulahan 3 hours ago
                    3 more

                    This would be great news if the whale literally only required krill to survive, but complex megafauna have complex needs, so the ability of krill and other small creatures to evolve is largely irrelevant in a discussion regarding the ability of megafauna to survive. This is especially true if you read TFA and see that the whales already adapt to eat different things as necessary.

                    • timschmidt 3 hours ago

                      Humpbacks have a highly specialized feeding mechanism. They only prey on krill and small fish.

                      The food chain really is sun -> algae -> krill (and sometimes small fish) -> humpback whale

                    • drysine 31 minutes ago

                      >but complex megafauna have complex needs

                      Like what? Emotional support dolphin?

          • thrance 4 hours ago

            Sure, in a few million years.

          • wahnfrieden 4 hours ago

            It’s game over for a very long time

swframe2 8 hours ago

I hope we create whalegemma (similar to dolphingemma) so we can explain to them how to co-exist better with humans (e.g. avoid this area during their whale hunting season, travel to this area if you get sick or tangled in rope).

tclancy 7 hours ago

It’s going to be prog rock, isn’t it?

  • naruhodo 42 minutes ago

    Not necessarily. Look at the Gorillaz.

  • parpfish 7 hours ago

    no, i think they're just going to start a podcast.

    • tclancy 7 hours ago

      Yes officer, this one right here.

  • _joel an hour ago

    The water goes all the way up to 11

  • The_Blade 3 hours ago

    Migaloo is joining Humphrey the Whale's team in SF forming a super team

astrocat 8 hours ago

holy units batman

> Bursting from their enormous lungs at over 300mph (483km/h), a humpback whale's blow can rise up to 7m (23ft) into the air.

Pick a lane BBC.

But this is great news. Also the fact that whales "transport huge amounts of nutrients across the globe" (linking to [1]) is fascinating. The role of whales in sucking up critters in one place and pooping them out elsewhere being a fundamental dynamic that drives global ocean ecosystems... just chefs kiss

[1] https://www.nature.com/research-intelligence/nri-topic-summa...)

  • frereubu 32 minutes ago

    I remember reading about whales returning to an area they hadn't been in for decades and people were worried about them eating all the local fish, but in fact their faeces enriched the local ecosystem from the ground up, leading to more fish. It's a bit like the counter-arguments to the lump of labour fallacy.

  • AlecSchueler 3 hours ago

    It's not just the BBC, it's the UK as a whole. Miles per hour or deeply entrenched for speeds but for measurements we use meters. The same for weight, we weigh people in stone but we weigh everything else with grams.

  • tom_ 7 hours ago

    I think the BBC policy is to provide every measurement in both types of unit.

    • gamerslexus 6 hours ago

      Ordering is inconsistent.

      • CarVac 6 hours ago
        5 more

        They use MPH in the UK.

        • aaronbrethorst 6 hours ago
          4 more

          Their hours are pegged to the hogshead, and are about 3 seconds shorter than American hours.

          • The_Blade 3 hours ago

            The metric system is the tool of the Devil! My Tesla gets 40 rods to the hogshead and that's the way I likes it!

          • lostlogin 4 hours ago
            2 more

            The US use of units is worse than the UK.

            Said from a proudly metric country, New Zealand, where everyone knows their weight in kilograms and height in feet and inches.

            • NooneAtAll3 9 minutes ago

              at least it's not stones

  • cyberax 4 hours ago

    Apparently they also measurably affect the vertical water mixing. Fish need dissolved oxygen to breathe, so they don't normally venture past the thermocline. And their fins are also vertical, so they don't cause a lot of vertical water movement.

    But whales routinely dive deep, and their tail fin is _horizontal_ and it creates powerful updrafts.

    Another organism that affects mixing is apparently jellyfish.

dotspec 6 hours ago

It's the Entmoot of the sea.

kunley 3 hours ago

They are going to save us from that XXIII century probe, right

shevy-java 2 hours ago

They may gather up for a protest. See the whale north of Germany who seems unable to swim away.

bitwize 7 hours ago

Perhaps they're forming a delegation to decide what to answer to that thing coming from space? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Star_Trek_IV%3A_The_Voyage_Hom...

  • jaza 4 hours ago

    Seriously though, we have Star Trek IV to thank in no small part for this amazing humpback comeback success story. Live long and prosper!

  • dhosek 6 hours ago

    So long and thanks for all the fish, perhaps.

starkeeper 3 hours ago

Hopefully they are building an army to conquer the planet.

  • dgb23 3 hours ago

    Or they pack up to leave.