Orcas keep attacking sailboats, sometimes sinking them. Scientists are looking for answers.

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A pod of orcas swim near a boat.

  • Orcas keep attacking sailboats off the coasts of Portugal, Spain, and Morocco.
  • One sailor shared his encounter with killer whales, after a pod of orcas sank a boat last year.
  • Scientists aren't sure why so many attacks are happening in the area.
Orcas are targeting sailboats near the Iberian Peninsula, and nobody knows why.

Greg Blackburn thought his boat was hitting rough waves when the thumps began on May 2, as he sailed through the Strait of Gibraltar near Tangier, Morocco, according to 9News.

But as the jolts continued, and the rudder seemed to resist his steering, Blackburn looked down and saw a giant black animal in the water, with the characteristic white oval and underbelly. Two orcas were repeatedly ramming his boat, and soon two more whales joined in.

"There's not a lot you can do at that point," Blackburn, a sailor from the UK, told 9News. "After reading reports and knowing what has been going on, just thought we were in for a ride now."

A collaboration of researchers have recorded more than 200 reports of "interactions," where orcas approach or touch a vessel, along Portugal and Spain's Iberian Peninsula since 2020.

Insider previously reported in 2020 about a series of aggressive actions by orcas along the Spanish and Portuguese coasts. At the time, scientists had different theories: The killer whales could be acting out of curiosity, mischief, or territoriality.

Orca attacks can be dangerous and sink boats​

A pair of notable killer whale attacks occured last July, when a pod of orcas attacked a sailboat off the coast of Portugal and, just hours later, targeted another vessel in the same area, according to reports.

The first incident, which local media described as "very much worse than usual," saw orcas ram a small sailboat carrying five people approximately seven miles off the coast of Sines, Portugal.

Orca attacks have sometimes immobilized sailboats, but local media said that, in this instance, it caused so much damage that the vessel started to sink.

The five crew members, who were on vacation, per The Sun, made it onto life rafts and radioed for help. A nearby fishing vessel was able to rescue them, according to a statement by the Portuguese Navy.

Unusually, another orca attack took place nearby just a few hours later.

Newsweek reported that the second orca attack involved a small sailboat with two passengers aboard.

The passengers, who were sleeping at the time of the attack, were traveling from Lisbon to the Algarve, per the local media outlet Portugal Resident.

The orcas, which can grow up to 26 feet long, struck the boat and bit the rudder, immobilizing it, the Portugal Resident said. The boat was towed to the dry dock.

This post has been updated with new information. It was originally published on August 13, 2022.

 
They representing for their brothers that have been kidnapped and forced into slavery (Seaworld and circuses and shit)

MoFos out there yelling “Free All Willys”

They got their own civil rights movement going on.
 

3 boats sunk after apparent coordinated orca attacks

Sailors speak out about the seemingly targeted incidents and scientists weigh in on the whale behavior.

 
These smart MFs are bored and want new toys to play with
orca-british-movie-poster.jpg

or is it just vengeance.:idea: Orca the Killer Whale (1977) watch what just one could possible do.
 
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I’m going to say this again; if these orcas turn fully against humans, we can not go back into the water again. This attitude change with those killer whales sort of happen overnight either they are finally sick of humans or something major is about to go down globally.
 
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Orcas lives matter too.....they didn't do anything it was the mermaids that did it
 
They are testing our defenses. Sooner or later we are going to be treated like the young buls that we are by the rest of the planet.
 
I’m going to say this again; if these orcas turn fully against humans, we can not go back into the water again. This attitude change with those killer whales sort of happen overnight either they are finally sick of humans or something major is about to go down globally.
They don't hear you!!
Not just deep water either.
They have no problem coming to the shoreline whatsoever.
 
I’m going to say this again; if these orcas turn fully against humans, we can not go back into the water again. This attitude change with those killer whales sort of happen overnight either they are finally sick of humans or something major is about to go down globally.
You funny...if Killer Whales don't want to join the thousands of other species mankind has knocked off, they better play nice with them boats

Now that that's out the way, this is some fascinating shit and it presents a unique challenge to sailors/ fishermen etc because of how smart these jokers are
 

White Gladis, the killer whale who could be behind orcas attacking boats, was pregnant when she started the 'uprising'

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  • Scientists believe the orca White Gladis was pregnant when she started ramming into boats in 2020.
  • Her unusual behavior likely followed a moment of agony around the same time, one expert said.
  • White Gladis later gave birth to her calf in 2021, following a 16-18 month pregnancy.
White Gladis is among a pod of killer whales that have been ramming boats off the coast of Spain and Portugal, near the Iberian Peninsula, for the last several years.

These encounters have become increasingly common, and are happening almost daily now. The animals have already sunk three boats and torn off the rudders of others in what's being called an "orca uprising."

White Gladis is just one among many orcas in this apparent uprising. But what makes her special is that she's believed to be the orca that started it all. And now recent reports suggest she was pregnant when it all began.

Who is White Gladis?​

White Gladis first started ramming boats in the summer of 2020 and later gave birth to her calf in 2021, according to LiveScience.

Since orca pregnancies typically last about 15 to 18 months, the timing suggests that she was probably pregnant when she started deliberately swimming up to boats, per LiveScience.

What's surprising is that mother orcas typically look after newborn calves for at least two years, providing them with safety and nourishment. But ramming boats isn't necessarily the safest behavior.

"She went to the boats with this calf, so she preferred to stop the boats rather than keeping her baby safe," said Mónica González, a marine biologist with the Coordinator for the Study of Marine Mammals (CEMMA), during a recent webinar.

This unusual behavior is what has led scientists to believe that "something bad happened" to White Gladis, per LiveScience. And that she's acting out of revenge due to trauma.

"That traumatized orca is the one that started this behavior of physical contact with the boat," Alfredo López Fernandez, a biologist at the University of Aveiro in Portugal and representative of the Atlantic Orca Working Group told LiveScience in May.

Why White Gladis's behavior spread to other orcas​

White Gladis may be the pioneer for her peers, but these interactions have become a bit of a fad for the local orca community.

etween 2020 and 2023, the Atlantic Orca Working Group has reported a 298% rise in orca boat interactions, Forbes reported.

Researchers think the other orcas are imitating White Gladis, which wouldn't be uncommon for killer whales as they're highly intelligent and sociable animals.

Many orca experts that Insider has spoken to maintain that White Gladis' behavior isn't rooted in trauma or revenge. They think she's just having fun.

"They're pushing, pushing, pushing – boom! It's a game," Orca expert Renaud de Stephanis told the BBC.

Whatever the underlying cause for the orca's behavior, humans are starting to take action. For example, researchers are planning to develop and test noise deterrents meant to scare orcas away from boats.

Experts fear the ultimate losers in this game of boat vs. orca won't be expensive yachts — it'll be the orcas.

"I am worried that people will take the situation into their own hands and use lethal or harmful tactics to try and, you know, get the whales to stop or at least you know, stop an attack at the moment," Deborah Giles, science and research director at Wild Orca, told Vice.



 
Melanemic humans are slow.

If I am not mistaken, a boat propeller ended up injuring an orca in a pod.

So, with that being said, sentient beings are going to handle sh!t when you fck wit’ they fam.
 
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