Science

Rare white orca spotted in Southeast Alaska

People in an 80-foot charter boat out of Petersburg recently saw what a biologist described as a “less-than-once-in-a-lifetime” event: a white orca swimming through the sea.

University of Alaska Fairbanks graduate student Stephanie Hayes was on the Northern Song, operated by Dennis Rogers, on Aug. 7, just offshore of the village of Kake. Hayes, working as first mate on the boat this summer, and others notice a pod of orcas about a quarter mile off.

As they took a closer look, they noticed one of the orcas was somehow glowing.

“There was a collective gasp from everybody on the bow,” Hayes said.

They continued to watch the white orca swim with its pod — a family group including three or four others, their coloring a typical dairy-cow black and white. Having studied killer whales during her undergraduate work in British Columbia, Hayes knew they were witnessing something special.

“There have only been about eight white killer whales ever recorded in the world,” she said by phone from Petersburg. “To have one in Southeast was an incredible phenomenon.”

Capt. Rogers, who often hosts researchers on his vessel, including those who study orcas, said it was the first white one he has seen in 45-plus years on Southeast Alaska waters.

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Because he lives with a view of the ocean in Petersburg, Rogers was able to get a second view of the white whale a few days later. He looked out a window and saw a pod of orcas. He lifted his binoculars and saw the white one among them.

He called Hayes, who drove over in her pickup and spotted them, surfacing for air, from the shore. She hopped out of her truck and saw the white orca within the pod about 100 yards offshore. She took photos, as she had from the boat.

Hayes, who studies squid in her graduate work at UAF, said the white orca has a condition called leucism, which she defined as a “lack of vibrancy” in its pigmentation. Caused by a mutation in the whale’s DNA, leucism is different from albinism, in which a creature is all white with pink eyes.

With a little research, Hayes and Rogers found that their white whale had been documented by British Columbia researchers.

Tl’uk — a word for moon in the language of the Salish peoples of the Pacific Northwest — is a 2-year-old male orca that has not yet left his family group. When he soon does (after other group members kick it out, as a mother moose rejects a full-grown calf), its glow might be a disadvantage, perhaps alerting seals of its approach.

“A new pod might not accept it after it reaches sexual maturity,” Hayes said.

Though scientists are not sure what causes leucism, Hayes said, some have speculated that inbreeding can cause higher rates of the mutation.

As for Tl’uk, Hayes said the orca probably hunted seals in LeConte Fjord near Petersburg after she last saw it. Now it may be long gone. The white orca belongs to a family group with an incredible range — people have seen this pod as far south as Oregon and as far north as Haines.

Hayes feels lucky that COVID-19 interrupted her squid fieldwork this summer, allowing her to work out of Petersburg.

“Not just to be able to see it, but to be able to see it hunting with the pod, was beyond what I could have ever hoped for as a scientist,” she said. “Hopefully, we can monitor it and find out what happens in the life of a white killer whale.”

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Ned Rozell | Alaska Science

Ned Rozell is a science writer with the Geophysical Institute at the University of Alaska Fairbanks.

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