Climate change and marine heatwaves are impacting humpback whale populations in the northern Pacific, with researchers observing declining numbers despite recent recovery from extinction threats. Warming seas are also affecting beluga whales' aggregation patterns. The presence of North Pacific whales off New England is attributed to climate change.
What is a whale native to the North Pacific doing off New England? Climate change could be the key https://t.co/5cle5YV3Vw
What's a whale native to the North Pacific doing off the coast of New England? Scientists say climate change is the key to the answer. https://t.co/hKiDh8UJnT
What is a whale native to the North Pacific doing off New England? 🐋🌎 https://t.co/dV7v86jZCT
What is a whale native to the North Pacific doing off #NewEngland? Climate change could be the key https://t.co/tI3S5qQPrl
New study suggests warming seas are negatively affecting #belugaWhales' aggregation patterns @frontiersin https://t.co/x76YpGU3Tr
Climate change and marine heatwaves have been contributing to declining humpback whale populations in the northern Pacific. Despite these whales only recently coming back from the brink of extinction, researchers aren't worrying about this decline yet. https://t.co/RHoHez9pOy