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Tides expected to be more promising amid effort to save orphaned B.C. orca

Click to play video: 'Uncertain fate for young orca stranded on Vancouver Island'
Uncertain fate for young orca stranded on Vancouver Island
It's a race against time to save an orphaned baby orca stranded near Zeballos. The young whale's mother died after becoming beached by low tide. Josh McInnes with UBC's Marine Mammal Research Unit discusses efforts to save the young whale from the same fate as its mother.

The tides are expected to be more promising this week in the northern Vancouver Island lagoon where an orphaned orca so far can’t be convinced to leave.

Work to coax the two-year-old Bigg’s killer whale over a sandbar and into the open ocean started after its mother died more than a week ago when she beached at the lagoon and could not be saved.

Low tide in the remote location off the northwest tip of Vancouver Island forced rescuers to pause their efforts over the weekend.

Click to play video: 'Efforts continue to rescue orphaned orca calf'
Efforts continue to rescue orphaned orca calf

Methods that have been tried so far include recorded whale calls, specialized directional guide lines, the pounding of Indigenous drum beats and metal pipes in the water struck to create a “sound wall,” but the young animal has not left.

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The B.C.-based whale research group Bay Cetology is hoping tour operators, naturalists and photographers in the area will submit photos of Bigg’s killer whales to its AI data hub to track the calf’s relatives and help with the eventual reunification.

The Ehattesaht First Nation has given the young calf a name: kwiisahi?is, meaning Brave Little Hunter.

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