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Granny (orca)

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Sex
  
Female

Offspring
  
J1 Ruffles

Known for
  
Long life

Species
  
Orcinus orca

Granny (orca) The world39s oldest known orca Granny is believed to have died

Breed
  
Southern resident killer whale

Died
  
c. October–December 2016 (age about 105)east Pacific Ocean

Residence
  
Northeast Pacific Ocean, coastal bays of Washington and British Columbia

Granny (born c. 1911, presumed dead between October–December 2016), also known as J2, was an orca (killer whale). She was estimated by some whale researchers to have been 105 years old (with a margin of error of 12 years). If correct, this age would make her the oldest known orca at the time of her death. A member of the endangered southern resident killer whale population, Granny lived in the northeast Pacific Ocean and coastal bays of Washington state and British Columbia. Granny was estimated to have been born in 1911. She was last seen on October 12, 2016, and was considered deceased by The Center for Whale Research in January 2017.

Contents

Granny (orca) Her Heart Still Goes On Killer whale called 39Granny39 born the year

Description

Granny (orca) Bad News For SeaWorld 103YearOld Orca Recently Spotted Thriving

Granny was recognizable from the gray "saddle patch" just behind her dorsal fin, and a half-moon notch in her fin. Simon Pidcock of Ocean EcoVentures said he had seen Granny thousands of times, and that the markings on orca fins were like fingerprints.

Granny (orca) The world39s oldest known orca Granny is believed to have died

Granny had been captured with the rest of her pod in 1967 but was too old at that time for a marine mammal park and so was released.

Granny (orca) Her Heart Still Goes On Killer whale called 39Granny39 born the year

Now that orca studies have been conducted for several decades, the exact age of many whales is known. The age of older orcas, such as Granny, is estimated by their offspring; they give birth around age 15, and stop having offspring around 40; by adding the generations together, ages can be estimated. There are also photographs of Granny from the 1930s and the size and growth of Granny and the other orcas has also been used in the age estimates. Granny was photographed in 1971 with a male orca, J1 Ruffles, who was thought to be her son. Ruffles was estimated as at least 20 years old, and as scientists believed him to be Granny's last offspring, her own age was estimated at about 60. Granny's age was estimated with a margin of error of 12 years, but was the subject of an academic dispute in 2016.

J pod

Granny (orca) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Granny, along with several of her descendants, travelled in the J pod, a group of about 25 orcas. J pod, along with Pods K and L, are the "J clan", which constitute the entire southern resident killer whale population. They frequent the inland waters of British Columbia and Washington State in the summer months, but roam from southeast Alaska to central California. They have completed a journey as far as 800 miles (1,300 km) in a week. As the oldest female in J pod, Granny would have been considered its leader.

Granny (orca) Oldest Puget Sound Orca 39Granny39 Missing and Presumed Dead NBC News

A well-known male orca thought to be Granny's son is J1 Ruffles. He was last seen in 2010. As of 2012, following the disappearance of J1 Ruffles, none of Granny's immediate children are known to be living. However, Granny had multiple grandchildren and great-grandchildren who travelled in the pod with her.

Granny (orca) World39s Oldest Known Orca Presumed Dead

The southern resident killer whales are the most studied population of orcas in the world. Many whales in this population were captured in the 1960s and 1970s for use in sea parks, and others were killed by hunters attempting to capture them. The southern resident orcas are the smallest of four resident communities from the Northeastern portion of the Pacific Ocean. It is the only orca population listed as endangered by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, and as of 2005 this group is protected under the Endangered Species Act.

Legacy

As the longest living known orca, Granny is employed as an example in arguments against keeping whales in captivity, referencing the allegedly reduced lifespan of captive animals. The oldest orca in captivity is the 50-year-old Lolita who is at the Miami Seaquarium. The average lifespan for a captured orca is 20 to 30 years. Of Granny's age, Captain Pidcock of Ocean Ecoventures Whale Watching said "[...] it’s mind-blowing to think that this whale is over 100 years old. She was born before the Titanic went down. Can you imagine the things she’s seen in her lifetime?"

Granny was also used as a focal point of environmental efforts that resulted in the Endangered Species Act protections for orca. Environmentalists estimate that Granny may have had a PCB load of up to 100 parts per million, and that her descendants' reproductive systems may have been damaged by exposure to pollution. Additionally, declining West Coast salmon populations put Granny and her family at risk.

Granny was featured in a children's book on orcas by Sally Hodson titled Granny's Clan: A Tale of Wild Orcas.

Shortly after Granny's death was announced, BBC Radio 4's Inside Science discussed the insights into killer whales and their social lives which the prolonged observations of Granny and her pod had revealed.

Granny is the subject of a short documentary film. The Hundred Year Old Whale will be released in 2017 by filmmaker Mark Leiren-Young, the author of The Killer Whale Who Changed The World.

Orca lifespan

Estimates of lifespans for wild orcas vary. SeaWorld says wild lifespans are 30–50 years for females, and 19–30 years for males. These estimates depart from the findings of a 2005 study, which pegged the mean age of females at 45.8 years and males at 31.0 during the period between 1973 and 1996. Marine conservation groups argue that even these estimates are low due to the effects of hunting, pollution, and capture on the wild populations, and that natural wild orca lifespans are equivalent to that of humans, with male orcas living up to 75 years and female orcas living up to 80 years.

References

Granny (orca) Wikipedia