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Eyes in the Sky for Right Whales

Woman observer in plane with two pilots before right whale survey flight

When it comes to conserving North Atlantic right whales, the Clearwater Marine Aquarium Research Institute has collaborated with Georgia DNR for over 20 years, conducting aerial surveys each winter for these critically endangered whales on their only known calving grounds – the waters off Georgia, north Florida and the Carolinas.

But while you’re probably familiar with the results of these surveys — most new moms and calves are first spotted by the aerial team — here are some cool things you may not know about this work.

CMARI right whale aerial observers, from left, Arianna Torello, Melanie White and Bridget Ausley (CMARI/NOAA permit 26919)

First, there are clear objectives for surveys by plane. They include:

As of Jan. 10, the Clearwater team had flown 20 surveys this winter calving season. Flight time per survey averaged almost 5.5 hours; the average distance covered, nearly 465 nautical miles. (Nautical miles are slightly longer than land miles because they’re based on the Earth’s curved surface for navigation.)

All told, the crew has been in the air for over 109 hours – or 4.5 days – and flown 9,295 nautical miles, a distance that, in a straight line, would reach more than 40 percent of the way around the world.

CMARI’s Bridget Ausley snaps shots during a whale survey flight (CMARI/NOAA permit 26919)

Team members have documented 53 right whale sightings, including 14 new calves, 36 mom/calf pairs – counting repeat sightings — and 102 individual whales (repeats included). And while other partners helping conserve North Atlantic right whales have also added sightings of mom-and-calf pairs this winter, just last Friday the Clearwater Marine Aquarium Research Institute team spotted the season’s 19th calf (and the crew’s 15th) about 9 miles off Amelia Island, Fla.

When we say “team,” here’s who we’re talking about:

The surveys require intense concentration over long hours. But they also have their light side.

Every time a new whale is seen, the members remember it with a song. For example, Melanie’s favorite whale — No. 1243 in the North Atlantic right whale catalog — is nicknamed Magic. So when this adult female turns up, Bridget always thinks of “Magic” by the band Pilot.

At the end of the season, Ari plans to burn everybody a copy of the complete mixtape as a keepsake!

Right whale catalog No. 1243, nicknamed Magic (you know), and calf spotted by plane off Amelia Island, Fla., on Jan. 16 (CMARI/NOAA 26919)

A few more fun facts about the team:

Stay tuned as the Clearwater Marine Aquarium Research Institute aerial team, DNR and other conservation partners keep watch over North Atlantic right whales this calving season.

Top photo: Clearwater Marine Aquarium Research Institute observer Arianna Torello and pilots at the start of a right whale survey flight (CMARI/taken under NOAA permit 26919)
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