There’s good news and bad news about the gray whale migration

Amazing grays

The gray whales are heading south to Baja California and passing our coast on their way to warmer Mexican waters and birthing grounds. The migration is one of the longest for any mammal.

Basics

Gray whale (Eschrichtius robustus)

Weight: 80,000 pounds

Lifespan: Unknown, believed to be as long as 80 years.

Gray whales migrate about 12,500 miles round trip from Alaska to Mexico. Some have been tracked for more than 14,000 miles.Migration pattern

Gray whales can be seen passing by California in December and January during their southern migration, and again between mid-February and early May on their journey north.

In December, gray whales begin to arrive at Baja lagoons where the females give birth. Throughout February and March, the males and females without calves begin to depart Baja and head north to cooler waters in Alaska. The whales spend the summer in the cool feeding grounds of the north.

The pregnant mothers and females nursing newborn calves are the last to head north in March to mid-April.

The gray whale’s predictable migration made them easy prey for whalers, and its species in the Atlantic Ocean was wiped out. Gray whales have been protected by the International Whaling Commission since 1946 and were taken off the U.S. Endangered Species List in 1994.

 

Abundance estimates

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