The Ocean Alliance HOME The Ocean Alliance
WCI
Voyage of the Odyssey
Ocean Alliance About Ocean Alliance Partners Research Whale Gallery Education F.A.Q. Site Map
OA Whale Shop Site Map
> Objective
> Right Whale Program
> Research
> Conservation
> Cape Ann Whale Watch

Researchers in Patagonia, Argentina studying a Right Whale
Researchers studying a Southern Right Whale - Patagonia, Argentina
Photo: Iain Kerr

They're Not Saved Yet

The Whale Conservation Institute (WCI) was founded in 1971 by Roger Payne to protect whales and their ocean environment through scientific research and education. Dr. Payne has conducted research on whales in all the oceans of the world, and for the past three decades has been an eloquent spokesman for whales and their welfare. He is the author of many books and articles on whales, and his work has been covered in more than thirty-five films and documentaries, including the recent IMAX film, "Whales," which he co-wrote, and co-directed. Staff and volunteers, at WCI's headquarters in Lincoln, MA and aboard our research vessel, Odyssey, provide support for and help carry out the research and education programs Dr. Payne has established for WCI & The Ocean Alliance.

The world's whales have not been saved. Among the many threats they face in the 1990s, including increased whaling, some commercial fishing practices, and "ghost nets" free-floating in the oceans, the problem of ocean pollution is becoming the most serious. WCI's mission and overall objective is to protect whales and the oceans they live in, and WCI is uniquely positioned to meet this objective.

WCI works to reach its goal through its ongoing programs, which include:

  • Voyage of the Odyssey. Because WCI is one of the few organizations in the world with the capability, personnel, and leadership to undertake it, we have developed an ambitious, five-year, global toxicological research study called Voyage of the Odyssey
  • Right Whale Program. WCI has been studying the same population of southern right whales for nearly 30 years, making it the longest continuing research study of any whale in the world
  • Outstanding educational programs, from our WHALE Education Program Kit to our CETA program, to the creation of a new nature documentaries
  • Working with the (National Resource Defence Council) NRDC and the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) to help prevent the building of the world's largest saltworks in San Ignacio Lagoon, Baja, California, Mexico, the last remaining undisturbed breeding ground of the gray whale
  • Whale Resource Center, providing photos, video, sounds, and information to the media and to the public.

"If we can't save the whales, we can't save anything."
Sir Peter Scott

INTRODUCTION TO THE WHALE CONSERVATION INSTITUTE

The Whale Conservation Institute is a 501(c)(3) organization founded in 1971 by Roger Payne. Dr. Payne has conducted research on whales in all the oceans of the world, and has been for the past three decades an eloquent spokesman for whales and their welfare. In the early 1970s, he was among the first to foresee and to sound the alarm about the worldwide ocean pollution problems we are now all learning about. In the January, 1979 issue of National Geographic, Dr. Payne said, "Pollution will soon replace the harpoon as the next mortal threat to whales and, ultimately, humanity."

Believing that rigorous science and widespread public education are basic requirements for long-term conservation, he founded WCI for the purpose of carrying out both those missions. WCI is headquartered in Lincoln, Massachusetts, but our areas of activity are global. Our research vessel Odyssey, a 93-foot, ocean-going steel ketch, operates in all the oceans of the world from her home base in San Diego.

Dr. Payne's work with whales first came to the public's attention in 1967 when, along with colleague Scott McVay, he discovered that the eerie sounds made by the humpback whale were actually complex, recognizable songs. He determined that these songs often include rhyme and meter, and he developed a system for transcribing them. Included in the National Geographic of January, 1979 was a playable recording called "Songs of the Humpback Whale," which presented most of us with our first opportunity to hear and appreciate these songs for ourselves. Hinting at, as they do, the "mind" of this remarkable whale, these songs have over the years had a powerful impact on the public consciousness.

Another of his contributions to the welfare of cetaceans (whales and dolphins) came in the early years of his career, when he revolutionized cetacean research by introducing and refining benign research techniques, thereby avoiding the need to harm whales in order to study them.

For his work, Dr. Payne has been awarded a MacArthur Fellowship, the 1994 Lyndhurst Prize, a knighthood from Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands, and has been named to the United Nations Environmental Program's Global 500 Roll of Honor. The National Geographic Society has referred to him as "the Dean of modern whale research," and his work has appeared four times on the pages of the National Geographic as well as in many other publications. He is the author of two books about whales, his most recent being Among Whales (1995), in which he examines whales and their environment from a personal perspective, drawing on his vast experience during thirty years of studying them and relating to them.

His is a well-known and respected figure at whale-related meetings, conferences, and symposiums in all parts of the world, such as the annual meetings of the International Whaling Commission, where his reasoned presentations and comments always receive an attentive hearing. His work has been the subject of more than thirty television documentaries, including 1991's popular, emmy-nominated "In the Company of Whales." In 1995 Dr. Payne co-wrote, and co-directed the IMAX production, "Whales," which was well-received by critics and the public alike. An estimated audience of 40,000 people from all over the world currently see this film each week. It has always been his hope that films and publications like these will help educate the public about whales and their uncertain future on this planet. He is currently at work on his next film, a documentary about interactions between whales and humans.

WCI's staff, though limited by its small size and by recurring financial constraints, is a loyal one, dedicated to carrying out the programs established for WCI over the years. WCI was founded 29 years ago to meet the important need to protect whales and their ocean environment. Its leadership has worked to carry out its mission with intelligence, with scientific integrity, and with heart and soul ever since. In spite of this work, however, and the work of many others, the need has not yet been met.

Why? The world's whales have by no means been saved. Whaling is on the increase in several parts of the world, for example, and some commercial fishing techniques still pose a threat to hundreds of thousands of the world's cetaceans every year. The North Atlantic right whale, so named because it was the "right" whale for whalers to kill, may actually become extinct during our lifetime. The Chinese river dolphin is almost certainly doomed to extinction, and other species that live in rivers near humans may very likely meet the same fate. Our oceans are cluttered with old, discarded, non-biodegradable fishing nets called ghost nets that continue to fish and to kill sea life long after their original purpose has been served. These are only a few of the problems faced in the 1990s by creatures that live in the sea.

There is another developing problem of such enormity that it must be considered by far the worst threat facing not only whales, but all ocean life. In recent years the tragic effects of ocean pollution on all kinds of sea life have been reported worldwide. For example:

  • In the 1980s, at least 900 dolphins died off the east coast of the U.S. from immune system disorders believed to have been caused by pollutants in their habitat;
  • In the seemingly crystal clear water off the Bahamas, Atlantic spotted dolphins are showing signs of pox, skin lesions, tumors, and birth defects thought to be immune system deficiencies caused by pollutants in the water;
  • The beluga whales in Hudson Bay are so full of chemical pollutants that when they die and their bodies wash ashore they are literally treated as toxic waste.

From the coastal areas of China, Africa, South America, and Europe-from all parts of the world come reports that similar situations are occurring. What can be done about this?

Are the studies we are conducting aboard the Odyssey safe for the whales?

Over the last 30 years WCI has been a pioneer in the field of developing and conducting benign research techniques. Many of the techniques we have developed are now adopted worldwide. As the threats to whales have expanded so have our research methodologies. In the United States of America, whales are protected under the Marine Mammal Protection Act and therefore all research on them is carefully regulated. The research that is conducted aboard the RV Odyssey will abide by these laws as it journey's around the world. The team of scientists working with WCI during the Voyage of the Odyssey is committed to the use of non-lethal and wherever possible non-invasive techniques to collect data. For our toxicology and genetics work two types of samples will be collected from the whales: free-floating skin fragments naturally shed by the animals and small biopsies of skin and blubber. Biopsy collection requires only minimally invasive technique and currently is the only way to collect data necessary for studying the levels and potential effects of pollution on whales.

 
> Home > Whale Conservation Institute > Voyage of the Odyssey > About Ocean Alliance > Partners > Research > Whale Gallery > Education > F.A.Q. > Site Map > Support Ocean Alliance