What Whales Do for You – Whale Pump, Whale Poo

[Update December 1, 2023.
Also see our article featured on the BBC’s “Making Planet Earth III” page at this link.]

The red colour of Inukshuk’s (BCZ0339) waste suggests he has been eating a lot of krill.
Photo ©MERS, Marine Mammal License MML-57.
By contrast, Conger (BCY0728) appears to have been eating a lot of fish (we know him to feed on a lot of juvenile herring). Photo ©MERS, Marine Mammal License MML-57.
Photo ©Ocean Wise, Marine Mammal License MML-18.

Why Whale Poo Is So Important
How the whale pump works from Roman and McCarthy, 2010.
From Chami et al. , 2019
Spike (BCX1847) defecating. She has since died from being hit by a large vessel.
Photo: Ocean Wise, Marine Mammal License MML-18.
Conger defecating again. Photo ©MERS, Marine Mammal License MML-57.
Merge (BCX1348). Photo ©MERS, Marine Mammal License MML-57.

Related Links:

Whoo hoo! Whale Poo.

Freckles the Humpback is back, with a splash!
And yes, that’s whale poo.


Freckles was tail-lobbing which makes it easier to see that she had been defecating. The colour suggests she’s been eating both krill and small schooling fish (most likely herring). When a Humpback’s diet is fish, the colour is grey and when the diet is krill, the colour is intense orange (see photo at the bottom of this blog).

This photo is a brilliant capture by MERS team member Marieke when doing her second job as naturalist for Mackay Whale Watching.

We share the image with you because:

1) To increase awareness of the importance of whale poo. Whales always defecate at the surface, fertilizing the phytoplankton / algae there. Through photosynthesis, this leads to more oxygen being produced and more carbon dioxide being absorbed. More phytoplankton also means more food, not only for the local marine ecosystem, but across ocean basins when the whales urinate in the nutrient-poor warm waters of their breeding grounds.

2) Because Freckles (BCY0727) is back! She’s such a recognizable Humpback Whale thanks to those little white marks on her sides that are the inspiration for her nickname.

Since 2009, she very predictably returned from the breeding grounds to feed around northeastern Vancouver Island.

But we did not see her from 2020 to 2022 (she had her first known calf in 2022). In those years, she was feeding in Alaska, known thanks to our colleagues at Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve and sightings contributions to Happywhale. She was there earlier this year too.

We are so glad to see you back Freckles, for the many gifts you bring!
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#WhalePump #WhatWhalesDoForYou #CarbonCapture

Planet Earth III

Updated November 23, 2023.
Reading this makes our hearts race.
It’s real. It’s happening.
For all of you who help us, you have helped with THIS.


Here is what we have been able to post previously about our involvement in #PlanetEarthIII (from our January 1st social media post):

“Giant news for 2023.
Our work will contribute to the BBC’s Planet Earth III.

We may now share this news that still has us blinking. We have been filming with the BBC in 2021 and 2022. The content will air in Europe on December 3rd, 2023 (on December 16 via BBC American and in March 2024 in Canada). This is what we have been nebulously referencing as “working with a film crew for a well-known documentary series.”

Contributing to the conservation messaging of the world’s furthest-reaching nature documentary, Planet Earth III, is beyond anything we could ever have imagined.

For all of you who have helped us, you have helped THIS.

On the production, we worked with:

  • Fredi Devas, producer, whose work includes BBC’s “Seven Worlds One Planet”, Planet Earth II “Cities”, and “Frozen Planet”.
  • Bertie Gregory, film-maker whose work includes BBB’s “Seven Worlds One Planet”, and star of National Geographic’s “Epic Adventures with Bertie Gregory”.
  • Hayes Baxley, cinematographer whose work includes Emmy award-winning “Secrets of the Whales” (Disney +).
  • Tavish Campbell, dear friend and British Columbia’s cinematographer deeply dedicated to conservation on our coast.

We filmed in ‘Namgis and Mamalilikulla Territories.
All filming was done under the filming license issued by Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO).”

From The Guardian:
“David Attenborough is to present the third instalment of the BBC’s award-winning natural history programme Planet Earth. This outing of the epic homage to nature’s variety will air later this year on BBC One.

“Planet Earth wouldn’t be Planet Earth without David, so I’m delighted he is presenting the third series,” says Mike Gunton, Planet Earth III’s executive producer. “As ever, he has brought his huge enthusiasm and wisdom, has been encouraging about our new perspective and has, I know, really enjoyed seeing the extraordinary new wonders brought to the screen.”

Filming on the series has already begun, including footage of Attenborough on location in Britain. The series will start with the 97-year-old presenter following in the footsteps of one of his personal heroes.

“The opening of the series with David was filmed in the beautiful British countryside in exactly the location where Charles Darwin used to walk while thinking over his Earth-shaking ideas about evolution,” says Gunton.

“It seemed the perfect place for David to introduce Planet Earth III and remind us of the wonders and the fragility of our planet.”

Attenborough’s participation in the series comes despite reports that his previous BBC series, Wild Isles – which aired in March – would be his last on-location shoot. Filming at sites such as Skomer Island off the west coast of Wales involved the presenter being accompanied by a doctor with a defibrillator each time he made the climb up the 87 steep concrete steps from the landing jetty to the top of Skomer Island.

Producers also claimed that they had to change their filming plans due to fears that placing Attenborough too close to the seabirds they intended to shoot could potentially end up killing the nonagenarian – due to an avian flu outbreak on the neighbouring island of Grassholm.

“I have an old friend who’s an expert on infectious diseases and I rang him up for his opinion,” says Wild Isles series producer Alastair Fothergill. “He said: ‘Well, bird flu is actually extremely hard to catch, but if he [Attenborough] gets it, he will die.”

Planet Earth is one of the BBC’s most popular natural history franchises. Previous instalments have won numerous awards including Baftas and Royal Television Society awards. The third series will consist of eight hour-long episodes.”

We do not know when Planet Earth III will air in Canada.

#ForTheWhales

Whales don’t blow water through their heads

See a Blow? Go Slow!
But what’s the blow?

It’s not water blown through the whale’s head! A whale expelling water though their blowhole would be drowning. Every once in a while / whale we need to clarify that. 🙂

There’s no connection between a whale’s mouth and blow holes (nostrils). Additionally, their internal temperature is the same as ours and that of other mammals.


Explained so well in the Hakai Magazine article “Storybook Whale Fail“:

“In the popular 2003 animated film Finding Nemo, two fish gulped down by a baleen whale escape when the whale shoots them out on a jet of water . . . . Let’s be clear: any whale that expels water from its blowhole is drowning.

Blowholes are modified nostrils, and whales use them to breathe air. The whale’s mouth and esophagus are completely separate from its blowhole and airway, so Nemo’s friends would find no escape there, and the spray that whales spout isn’t water. It’s warm, moist air from their lungs, droplets of water from around the blowhole, and a certain amount of whale snot.”

So there you go – www.SeeABlowGoSlow.org!

But realize that your ability to see a blow depends on how much the whale is exerting themselves (how powerful the exhalation is) and weather conditions such as wind and the temperature of the air.

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Boaters need to be vigilant for whales at all times. No fiction is needed. Reality is, we are so lucky to have witnessed the return of giants from the brink of extinction and oh the richness we gain.

What comes out of the other end of the whale is deposited at the surface, fertilizing the ecosystem, increasing productivity, oxygen production, and the amount of carbon dioxide absorbed.

In a report by the International Monetary Fund, it is put forward that each great whale sequesters ~ 33 tons of carbon. That’s the equivalent of around 30,000 trees.

That’s no blow!

Chami, R., Cosimano, T. F., Fullenkamp, C., & Oztosun, S. (2019). Nature’s Solution to Climate Change: A strategy to protect whales can limit greenhouse gases and global warming, Finance & Development, 0056(004), A011. Retrieved Aug 26, 2023, from https://doi.org/10.5089/9781498316880.022.A011