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"We speculate that this represents the re-establishment of a traditional migration pattern for an eastern North Pacific blue whale population," the scientists say in the journal article written by Calambokidis, Barlow and others. Scientists aren't certain why blue whales are beginning to migrate again to the north. One theory is that ocean conditions have changed and pushed krill farther north. The changes are believed to be part of a normal shift in ocean temperature that occurs every decade or so. There were an estimated 350,000 blue whales before whalers hunted them to near-extinction in the 20th century. The International Whaling Commission banned hunting of blue whales in 1966, but recovery has been slow. According to the American Cetacean Society, there are an estimated 8,000 to 14,000 blue whales. The biggest number is off the California coast. Bruce Mate, director of the Marine Mammal Institute at Oregon State University, said he suspects that what researchers are seeing now has been the case all along. "When the food dries up, these animals wander over enormous ranges," he said. He thinks the migration is getting noticed now because there are more blue whales and more effort is being made to find them. "I think what we are looking at now is what has always been," he said. ___ On the Net: NOAA: http://www.noaa.gov/ NOAA news release on blue whale study: Marine Mammal Science article:
http://sn.im/whale-noaa
http://sn.im/whale-article
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