Skip to content
All news
  • All news
  • About whales & dolphins
  • Corporates
  • Create healthy seas
  • End captivity
  • Green Whale
  • Prevent deaths in nets
  • Scottish Dolphin Centre
  • Stop whaling
  • Stranding
  • Whale watching

New government marine wildlife code to help reduce dolphin disturbance

The launch today by UK Government of new guidance on how to act responsibly around...

UK government to extend ivory ban to stop the sale of orca teeth

Following the UK ban on the import, export and dealing of elephant ivory in 2022,...

Dead whale beauty products to be sold in Japanese vending machine stores

Antarctic minke whale alongside Japanese whaling ship. Photo © Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert Japanese whale hunting company,...

Arrests made following illegal whale meat smuggling from Japan to South Korea

Customs authorities in Busan, South Korea, have arrested six people for allegedly smuggling at least...

Are humpback whales saving seals from orca attacks?

It appears that we humans may not be the only ones that care about the welfare of others creatures. Global data being analysed by scientists seems to suggest that humpback whales are making a conscious effort to rescue other species, like seals, from attacks by orcas.

Although more scientific study needs to be done, there are now numerous reports of this kind of selfless activity by humpback whales.

Marine ecologist Robert Pitman recounts a specific and dramatic example whilst he was observing a pod of orcas hunting a seal trapped on an ice floe off Antarctica. The orcas knocked the seal off the ice and into the sea but before they could kill the seal, a humpback whale rose up out of the water beneath the seal and then allowed the seal to climb onto its upturned belly to keep it out of the water. The seal slipped down the side of the whales but the humpback then appeared to use its flippers to help the seal back aboard. Once the orcas had retreated, the seal swam off.

BBC filmakers  also observed pair of humpback whales attempting to save a gray whale calf from a hunting pod of orcas after he or she had become separated from the mother.

Pitman has since discovered 115 similar interactions, reported by 54 different observers between 1951 and 2012. Aside from seals, other species ‘helped’ by humpbacks include sea lions and ocean sunfish. The details of this surprising survey can be found in the journal Marine Mammal Science, with information gathered suggesting that the humpbacks, often working in pairs, are choosing to disrupt the orca hunts after they have begun.

The big question is why? Is this just an act of kindness? It could be an act of revenge by adult humpbacks who may have witnessed orcas attacking and killing their own young, or an attempt to make the predators think twice should they choose to attack a humpback calf in the future.