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Community Corner

Updated: Group of Killer Whales Feeding on Fish an Unusual Sight

A boat captain reports spotting the pod of orcas on Friday morning.

9:50 p.m. April 16

The killer whales seen Friday have been identified as offshore-type killer whales.

The orcas most often seen off Southern California waters are transients which feed almost exclusively on mammals. Offshore killer whale diets consist of fish and small sharks. They typically travel in pods of 25-100 whales. At times, they break into smaller groups of 5-15.

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The fact that offshore orcas travel in large numbers bodes well for whale-watchers this weekend. Alisa Schulman-Janiger from the American Cetacean Society says she has less than 60 records of offshore killer whales seen off the coasts of California in the last 19 years.

Schulman-Janiger requests weekend boaters who encounter any killer whales take photographs for identification purposes. Send them to janiger@cox.net.

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A pod of six to eight orcas was seen Friday morning about 10 miles from San Pedro near the Whiskey Buoy, a local boat captain reported. The killer whales were feeding on fish, which is unusual as most orcas in the area feed on mammals.

Capt. Jerry Lewis of the Magician, out of Ports O' Call Sportfishing, was headed to Catalina Island for a dive trip when he spotted the ferocious predators rounding up bait balls.

“They were very active, blowing bubbles, circling the bait and breaching,” Lewis said.

At one point, the pod broke into two smaller groups but came together again after about 10 minutes.

“It was so amazing to see these animals work as a group,” Lewis said. “They were circling the bait, blowing bubbles and herding the baitfish into tighter circles so they could eat them.”

The orca is an odontocete, or toothed, whale and has been called “the wolf of the sea.” They are skillful, fast and well-organized hunters. Orcas have about 50 conical teeth that point slightly backward and inward. The upper and lower teeth interlock, which aids in gripping large prey and tearing it into smaller pieces.

They generally live in pods consisting of several females, calves, one or more males and/or juveniles.

Don Ashley, from Pierpoint Landing in Long Beach, remembered one time he saw orcas feeding on fish.

“It was around 1975 when I was working on the Charger out of San Diego, when a pod of orcas surrounded us and started eating every hooked albacore we had,” he said. “The thing I remember most is that a couple of the albacore were reeled in dead without any bite marks at all—it was as though they died of fright.”

There have been some enormous bait balls off Palos Verdes so it is not out of the question that the whales will show up there. Now would be a great time to jump on a whale-watching trip and possibly witness the "wolf of the sea" up close and personal.

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