Everything about Humphrey The Whale totally explained
Humphrey the Whale is arguably the most widely publicized
humpback whale in history, having errantly entered
San Francisco Bay twice, departing from his
Mexico to
Alaska migration. This behavior isn't normal for any Humpback whale, and Humphrey became well known on national television and press coverage for his misadventures in the years 1985 and 1990. Humphrey is a member of the species
Megaptera novaeangliae, and each episode of his bay excursions resulted in a dramatic estuarine rescue of this giant mammal by the
Marine Mammal Center, based in
Marin County, California, assisted by the
United States Coast Guard and hundreds of other volunteers. Humphrey (sometimes known in the media as
Humphrey the humpback whale) is 40 feet (12 m) long and weighs 80,000 pounds (36 tonnes). Humphrey’s last sighting was in the vicinity of the
Farallon Islands in the year 1991.
Humphrey's Journeys Inland
In 1985, Humphrey mysteriously entered San Francisco Bay and was followed closely on the evening news by all Bay Area
television stations. Each evening the Bay area audience would tune in for the latest update on Humphrey’s plight, until even more amazingly he swam up the
Sacramento River into a
freshwater habitat. Then national media coverage began and the whole country watched the ensuing chapter. The whale, first spotted at Oakland's Outer Harbor October 10, 1985, swam up the
Carquinez Strait, the Sacramento River and under the Rio Vista Bridge to a dead-end slough 69 miles (111 km) from the ocean. Humphrey reached the freedom of the
Pacific Ocean under the
Golden Gate Bridge November 4, 1985, at 4:36 p.m. The town of
Rio Vista considers the Humphrey visit to have given it national recognition, and to this date there's a
granite plaque at the harbor commemorating the visit and local restaurants menus remarking on his stay in Rio Vista.
Humphrey stayed a considerable time in 1990 in the
embayment immediately north of
Sierra Point in
Brisbane, California where occupants of the
Dakin Building could observe his antics. Humphrey became beached on a
mudflat in San Francisco Bay to on the north of
Sierra Point and to the south of
Candlestick Park. He was extricated from the mudflat with a large cargo net and support from the Marine Mammal Center and a U.S. Coast Guard boat.
Both times he was successfully guided back to the Pacific Ocean using a "sound net" in which people in a
flotilla of boats made unpleasant noises behind the whale by banging on steel pipes, a
Japanese fishing technique known as "
oikami." Simultaneously, the attractive sounds of humpback whales preparing to feed were broadcast from a boat headed towards the open ocean. Researchers
Louis Herman and Bernie Krause led a team of scientists who used sound recordings of natural whale feeding
vocalizations to guide Humphrey back to safety. These sounds were produced for a swimming trajectory of fifty miles (80 km) until Humphrey reached the Pacific Ocean sometimes attaining speeds of thirty miles per hour (48 km/h). Humphrey has been seen only once since the second misadventure, at the Farallon Islands in 1991. A film “Humphrey the Lost Whale” was produced and opened at the Tybee Island Marine Science Center, Savannah, Georgia on September 24, 2005.
Two More "Wayward Whales"
In early May 2007, two humpback whales, a mother and her calf, entered
San Francisco Bay and swam up the
Sacramento River approximately 90 nautical miles upstream from the
Golden Gate, about 20 miles further inland than Humphrey had gone two decades earlier. Just as with Humphrey, researchers,
Coast Guard personnel, and volunteers tried several methods to coax the whales back downriver. They played recordings of feeding sounds and other
whale vocalizations to lure them, and they banged on submerged metal pipes and sprayed high-powered blasts of water to repel them, but it isn't clear whether any of these were particularly effective. There was heightened concern for the whales' well-being this time, because both of them had sizable gash wounds, most likely made from boat
keel or
propellor strikes.
Veterinarians administered
antibiotics to the whales to help heal these deep open wounds, and they took samples of skin lesions incurred during the whales' extended time away from
seawater to analyze them for possible
freshwater bacterial infection.
On May 20, after languishing for six days in the
Sacramento Deep Water Ship Channel, the whales finally started moving. They were spotted the next day about 20 miles downstream, just upriver from
Rio Vista, where they lingered for several days, seemingly hesitant to pass under the
Rio Vista Bridge. On May 27 they were on the move again and were spotted the next day another 20 miles downstream in the
saltier waters of
Suisun Bay, just 45 miles or so from the ocean, but again their circling movements seemed to indicate a reluctance to pass beneath a bridge, actually a trio of bridges this time at
Benicia. On May 29, however, they again moved quickly, passing under the
Benicia Bridge in the morning and swimming through the
Carquinez Strait and past yet another pair of
bridges. By late afternoon they'd continued through
San Pablo Bay and were circling just beyond the
Richmond-San Rafael Bridge near
Tiburon. They were last spotted at sunset that night, within 10 miles of the
Golden Gate Bridge and the open ocean beyond.
A small controversy arose over what to call the whales as soon as they were spotted far enough upiver to warrant significant attention. Besides being called "the Wayward Whales," they were also dubbed "Momma" and "Baby", "Rio" and "Vista", and "Delta" and "Dawn" (for the
Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta and the popular 1970s song
Delta Dawn). Rumour has it that California's Lieutenant Governor
John Garamendi was the one to bestow the last pair of names upon the whales.
The story of the wayward whales inspired local television anchor Stefanie Cruz to write a children's book based on the tale. "Delta & Dawn: Mother and Baby Whales' Journey" which was released November 2007. Cruz is an anchor for CW31/CBS13 in Sacramento.
Description
Humphrey and other Humpback whales can readily be identified by a stocky body with well defined humps and black upper elements. His head and lower
jaw are covered with knobs called
tubercles, which are actually
hair follicles and are characteristic of the species. The tail flukes, which are lifted high in the
dive sequence, have wavy rear edges.
The long black and white tail
fin, which is approximately one third of his body length, and
pectoral fins has a unique pattern, which enable scientists to positively identify Humphrey, in a similar way to the bill markings on
Bewick's Swans. Several hypotheses have been suggested to explain the evolution of the Humpback's pectoral fins, proportionally the longest fins of any
cetacean. The two most accepted hypotheses are that the higher maneuverability afforded by long fins is a significant evolutionary advantage, or that the increased surface is useful for temperature control when migrating between warm and cold climates.
The Humpback Whale is a
mammal which belongs to the
baleen whale suborder. It is a large
whale: an adult usually ranges between 12–16
m (40–50
ft) long and weighs approximately 36,000
kilograms (79,000
pounds), or 36
tonnes (40
short tons). It is well known for its
breaching (leaping out of the water), its unusually long front fins, and its complex
whale song. The Humpback Whale lives in oceans and seas around the world, and is regularly sought out by
whale-watchers.
References
Further Information
Get more info on 'Humphrey The Whale'.
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