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Stevick's colleagues matched the Flickr photo to a picture of the whale taken two years earlier in Abrolhos, an area of small volcanic islands off the Brazilian coast. So how did Stevick and his colleagues recognize the whale as the same one photographed by researchers in 1999? Carole Carlson, Stevick's colleague, said the key to identifying humpback whales is in their tails. Humpbacks have big tail fins called "flukes," which are spotted and ridged. Carlson compared them to "huge fingerprints." Stevick elaborated: "There's an enormous amount of information in those natural markings. There's the basic underlying pattern of the black and white pigment on it, numerous scars across the tail, and the edge is very jagged
-- each of those things provides a piece of information." "The likelihood that two animals would have every single one of those things identical would be vanishingly small." Simon Ingram, a professor of marine conservation at the University of Plymouth in southern England, expressed confidence the two photos showed the same whale, saying that photo identification was a "very, very powerful technique." But Ingram, who wasn't involved in the research, said he was less excited by the length of the whale's trip than its destination.
"To my mind, the remarkable thing isn't the distance but the difference," he said. Whale communities were sometimes thought of as discrete communities, seldom mixing. This shows that's not always the case, he said. As to why the whale went the way it did, Ingram said that "the fact is, we just don't know." "You can track them, but you don't know what's motivating them,"
he said. ___ Online:
[Associated
Press;
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