Transient (marine mammal eating) killer whales / orca

http://www.sararegistry.gc.ca/plans/showDocument_e.cfm?id=1363 - Draft transient killer whale recovery strategy . Table 1 on pages 10 to 12 rates the threats to transients. 

ID catalogue for British Columbia and Southeast Alaskan transients - the work of Dr. John Ford, Graeme Ellis and Jared Towers (Department of Fisheries and Oceans Cetacean Research Program) in photo-identifying the N. Resident killer whales

SARA species profile.  Be sure to scroll to the bottom of the page of possible further reports on the species.

Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) assessment.  

http://www.speciesatrisk.gc.ca/search/speciesDetails_e.cfm?SpeciesID=606 -threats to Transients

Summary table for BC’s Killer Whale Populations.  Put together by Jackie Hildering 

BC Cetacean Sightings Network species information

Research papers by DFO.

Antibiotic resistant bacteria found in Southern Residents (Nov 2008). Could be true for more killer whale populations and cetaceans in general.

Vancouver Aquarium’s Wild Killer Whale Adoption Programme – good natural history

Center for Whale Research’s amazing photos of an attack of transient killer whales on a harbour seal and a Dall's porpoise. 

National Geographic movie (53 minutes) on killer whales - residents and transients.  Addresses the threats of reduced food supply and bioaccumulation. Realize that this may be a different transient killer whale population than that found in BC.

North Pacific Universities Marine Mammal Research Consortium's excellent fast facts; also click "research" and "killer whales" for very current research issues

Vancouver Aquarium page on the importance of identifying killer whales as individuals.  Includes video. 

How our attitudes to killer whales have changed over time (from the Vancouver Aquarium). 

Chapters from Daniel Francis and Gil Hewlitt’s book “Operation Orca” that highlight human history with killer whales.

Voices of the Sea very cool  website where you can hear the sounds of cetaceans, see the spectrogram of their sounds, see video clips and learn cool facts from experts! If you click on the orca and  and "sound of the orca", Dr. John Ford will tell you about residents and transients  from our area (Northern Vancouver Island).

BC’s Cetacean Sighting’s Network information - Click on "BC's Cetaceans" and then the image of the animal. www.wildwhales.org 

http://www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/species-especes/species/species_killerWhale_NE_Pac_e.asp  - DFO pages on threats and natural history.  Good summary. 

The back issues of the Wild Killer Whale Adoption Programmes publication "The Blackfish Sounder" .

Whales, Dolphins and Porpoises of British Columbia, Canada. DFO publication

Enter the species name in the search field to get any AquaNews bulletins posted by the Vancouver Marine Sciences Centre

http://www.orcalab.org/about-orcas/index.htm - Orca Lab’s natural history of killer whales

http://www.geocities.com/theorcaocean/OrcasInCaptivity.html - orca in captivity Not a Canadian page

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/whales/ - "Frontline's" discussion of orca in captivity.  History of orca in captivity.  Video footage of Japanese slaughter of bottlenose dolphins and orca. 

http://www.rtis.com/nat/user/elsberry/marspec/mm_info.html - ecolocation/biosonar

http://www.dosits.org/gallery/intro.htm - click your species name to hear its sounds! and http://www.dosits.org/animals/intro.htm - study how marine mammals make sound and how sound effects them.

http://www.zoology.ubc.ca/~ford/ - orca vocals; Dr. John Ford's webpage

http://www.stubbs-island.com/english/orca/index.html - Stubbs Island Whale Watching’s killer whale information

www.racerocks.com/racerock/marmam/mammals.htm
and http://www.racerocks.com/racerock/archivemammals.htm
- involvement of Lester B. Pearson School in a fantastic marine mammal project.  Search the site at http://www.racerocks.com/racerock/web/sitemap.htm

www.oceanlink.island.net - Bamfield Research Station’s detailed marine biology page search for your species.

Scientific paper on “Geographic variation in killer whales on humpback whales in the North Pacific.”