NEWPORT, ORE. — Gray whales that spend their summers feeding in the shallow waters off the Pacific Northwest coast have declined in body length since around the year 2000, a recent Oregon State University (OSU) study found.

The smaller size could have major consequences for the health and reproductive success of the affected whales, and also raises alarm bells about the state of the food web in which they coexist, the researchers say.

53787013658_3563f2edd3_o.jpg

This graphic shows the decline in Pacific Coast Gray Whale body size.

200730_I2O_S5_U4_DJI0010.MOV_00_04_36_vlc00016.tiff

Gray whales on the Pacific Coast have shrunk by 13% in the last two or three decades.

5D21EB28-F221-4602-82FB-E2F050A5F6D4_1_105_c.jpeg

A Pacific Coast Gray whale, taken with a drone.

MMX_V2.png

For this study, researchers used software to measure the body size of whales in drone images.

image1.jpeg

Another Gray whale surfaces.