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Researchers blame malnutrition for record-breaking number of gray whale deaths

Stay up to date with notifications from The IndependentNotifications can be managed in browser preferences.Jump to contentThank you for registeringPlease refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged inAllNewsSportCultureLifestyleTwenty-two gray whales have been found dead on Northwest beaches and along Washington's Puget Sound this year, already surpassing the number of strandings recorded at the same point in the record-breaking year of 2019. Malnutrition has been identified as the most common finding in the whales examined, according to experts from Cascadia Research Collective and NOAA Fisheries. Researchers believe that climate change in the Arctic, the whales' feeding grounds, is reducing their prey due to factors such as increasing ocean acidity, rising temperatures, and changing oceanographic patterns. Gray whales in Washington are designated with a "sensitive" status, indicating they are vulnerable or declining and face a high risk of becoming endangered or threatened within the state. In addition to malnutrition, other significant threats contributing to gray whale deaths include entanglement in fishing gear and marine debris, ship strikes (responsible for at least four deaths this year), and human-generated marine sound. In fullNearly two dozen gray whales have already died of strandings this year on Northwest beachesThank you for registeringPlease refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in

Raccontata danbcnews.comindependent.co.uk

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AI · summaries
independent.co.uk21 h fa

22 gray whales have already died of strandings this year on Northwest beaches

22 gray whales have died stranded on Washington and Puget Sound coasts this year, already exceeding the 2019 record pace. Malnutrition — driven by Arctic climate change depleting benthic prey — is the primary cause, with ship strikes confirmed in at least 4 cases.

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nbcnews.com1 g fa

3 months, 21 dead gray whales: Why so many carcasses are washing up on Pacific shores

Many of the dead whales have appeared thin and weak. Researchers think there’s a problem with their food supply in the Arctic — a result of melting ice.

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Timeline cronologica

  1. lunedì 25 maggio 2026·nbcnews.com

    3 months, 21 dead gray whales: Why so many carcasses are washing up on Pacific shores

    Many of the dead whales have appeared thin and weak. Researchers think there’s a problem with their food supply in the Arctic — a result of melting ice.

  2. lunedì 25 maggio 2026·independent.co.uk

    22 gray whales have already died of strandings this year on Northwest beaches

    The whales are suffering from malnutrition, which researchers believe has been a consequence of climate change

  3. lunedì 25 maggio 2026·independent.co.uk

    Researchers blame malnutrition for record-breaking number of gray whale deaths

    Stay up to date with notifications from The IndependentNotifications can be managed in browser preferences.Jump to contentThank you for registeringPlease refresh the page or…