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Fluffybunny
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -- The white killer whale spotted in Alaska's Aleutian Islands sent researchers and the ship's crew scrambling for their cameras.The nearly mythic creature was real after all. "I had heard about this whale, but we had never been able to find it," said Holly Fearnbach, a research biologist with the National Marine Mammal Laboratory in Seattle who photographed the rarity. "It was quite neat to find it." The whale was spotted last month while scientists aboard the Oscar Dyson, a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration research ship, were conducting an acoustic survey of pollock near Steller sea lion haulout sites. It had been spotted once in the Aleutians years ago but had eluded researchers since, even though they had seen many of the more classic black and white whales over the years.

Fearnbach said the white whale stood out.

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MissMelsWell
Very very cool!

I used to live out on Whidbey Island off Possession Bar in WA State (His Fluffiness likely knows where that is)... and every spring the A Pod of Orca's would come through the area. I never got tired of looking out the living room windows trying to spot them. They're nothing short of majestic.

Neognosis
Moby Dick was a white sperm whale. Not that it matters.

I wonder how long this white whale will survive. Is there one single mutant whale, or is this a new subspecies? Sounds like just a few odd mutants.

However, if there is some benefit to being white, and they pass on their white genes.....
Cetacea
QUOTE (Neognosis @ Mar 7 2008, 09:05 PM) *
Moby Dick was a white sperm whale. Not that it matters.

I wonder how long this white whale will survive. Is there one single mutant whale, or is this a new subspecies? Sounds like just a few odd mutants.

However, if there is some benefit to being white, and they pass on their white genes.....


By the size and shape of it's dorsal, especially compared to the other animals in the pod (http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2008/images/whiteorca3.jpg), I would think it's an adult male, females and juveniles have more curved fins, hence he seems to have survived the most problematic years already. It would be interesting to see how his colouration affects his reproductive success though. Even if he is highly successful though i doubt we will see a lot more white whales in the near future, albinism is usually a recessive trait as far as i know and even if he is not a true albino I would guess that his condition is recessive rather than dominant as well.
I don't think it's a subspecies, while there is a subspecies of orca that can be more grey than black, this is found predominantly in the Antarctic waters.
There have been other white orcas, one was documented in Canada in the 70s, she was captured and brought into an aquarium where she died two years later….
This is a picture of her:
linked-image
louie
Are there any more pics of the white whale, i can only find the 1 on the link.
Cetacea
QUOTE (louie @ Mar 9 2008, 03:18 PM) *
Are there any more pics of the white whale, i can only find the 1 on the link.


http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2008/i.../whiteorca1.jpg
http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2008/i.../whiteorca2.jpg
http://www.noaanews.noaa.gov/stories2008/i.../whiteorca3.jpg
One Message for Man

Very interesting! Its rarity reminds me of that of the yellow shark. Possibly even rarer?
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