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"Narwhals are hopelessly hard to see, never come when you want them to, swimming far offshore and underwater the whole time," she says. "You think you'll catch a whale in three weeks, you probably won't. Whole field seasons go by and you don't even see a narwhal. There are so many disappointments. It takes great patience and optimism—those are my two words."
The species is practically a blank slate, which is what drew her to narwhals in the first place—that and the crystalline allure of the Arctic. By now she has analyzed scores of narwhal carcasses and managed to tag and follow about 40 live animals, publishing new information about diving behavior, migration patterns, relationship to sea ice and reactions to killer whales. Much of what the world knows about the narwhal's picky eating habits comes from Laidre's research, particularly a 2005 study that offered the first evidence of the whales' winter diet, which is heavy in squid, arctic cod and Greenland halibut. She is the co-author of the 2006 book Greenland's Winter Whales.
Basic questions drive her work. How many narwhals are there? Where do they travel and why? Greenland's government funds part of her expeditions, and her findings influence how the narwhal hunting season is managed. As Greenland modernizes, Laidre hopes to raise public awareness about the whales and their significance to the people and environment of the north. Especially now that the climate seems to be warming, narwhals, Laidre believes, will be seriously affected by melting.
"Most creatures on earth we know a lot more about," Laidre says. "We probably know a lot more about the brains of grasshoppers than we do about narwhals."
The alabaster beluga's dark cousin, the narwhal is not a conventionally beautiful animal. Its unlovely name means "corpse whale," because its splotchy flesh reminded Norse sailors of a drowned body. This speckled complexion is "weird," says James Mead, curator of marine mammals at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History (NMNH); usually, he says, whales are a more uniform color. And unlike other whales, narwhals—which can live more than 100 years—die shortly in captivity, greatly reducing the opportunity to study them. "We've only had a glimpse of the beast," Pierre Richard, a prominent Canadian narwhal specialist, told me.
The whales mate in cracks of ice in the dead of winter, in pitch darkness, when the wind chill can drive the air temperature to minus 60 degrees Fahrenheit. ("Not very romantic," Richard notes.) While shifting currents and winds create breaks in the ice, enabling the animals to surface and breathe, the whales must keep moving to avoid getting trapped. Because of the extreme cold, calves are born husky, about one-third the size of their 12-foot-long, 2,000-pound mothers. Like belugas and bowheads, which also inhabit arctic waters, narwhals are about 50 percent body fat; other whales are closer to 20 or 30 percent. No one has ever seen a submerged narwhal eat. Laidre led a study of the stomach contents of 121 narwhals that suggested they fast in summer and gorge on fish in winter.
Fond of bottom-dwelling prey like Greenland halibut, narwhals are incredibly deep divers. When Mads Peter Heide-Jorgensen, Laidre's Danish colleague and frequent collaborator, pioneered narwhal-tagging techniques in the early 1990s, his transmitters kept breaking under the water pressure. Five hundred meters, 1,000, 1,500—the whales, which have compressible rib cages, kept plunging. They bottomed out around 1,800 meters—more than a mile deep. At such depths, the whales apparently swim upside down much of the time.
The whales' most dazzling feature, of course, is the swizzle-stick tusk that sprouts from their upper left jaw. Though the whales' scientific name is Monodon monoceros, "one tooth, one horn," an occasional male has two tusks (the NMNH has two rare specimens) and only 3 percent of females have a tusk at all. The solitary fang, which is filled with dental pulp and nerves like an ordinary tooth, can grow thick as a lamppost and taller than a man, and it has a twist. On living whales, it's typically green with algae and alive with sea lice at its base. No one's sure precisely how or why it evolved—it has been called a weapon, an ice pick, a kind of dousing rod for fertile females, a sensor of water temperature and salinity, and a lure for prey. Herman Melville joked that it was a letter opener.
"Everybody has a theory on this," Laidre says with a sigh. (The question comes up a lot at cocktail parties.)
Most scientists, Laidre included, side with Charles Darwin, who speculated in The Descent of Man that the ivory lance was a secondary sex characteristic, like a moose's antlers, useful in establishing dominance hierarchies. Males have been observed gently jousting with their teeth—the scientific term is "tusking"—when females are nearby. The tooth, Laidre patiently explains, cannot be essential because most females survive without one.
In 2004, Greenland set narwhal-hunting quotas for the first time, despite some hunters' protests, and banned the export of the tusks, halting a thousand-year-old trade. Conservationists—newly roiled this past summer by the discovery of dozens of dead narwhals in East Greenland, the tusks chopped out of the skulls and the meat left to rot—want still more restrictions. It's estimated there are at least 80,000 of the animals, but nobody knows for sure. The International Union for Conservation of Nature this year said the species was "near threatened."
Related topics: Whales Weird Animals Biology Arctic Ocean
Additional Sources
Greenland's Winter Whales: The beluga, the narwhal and the bowhead whale by Mads Peter Heide-Jorgensen and Kristin Laidre, Greenland Institute of Natural Resources, c. Ilinniusiorfik Undervisningsmiddelforlag, 2006
"Winter Feeding Intensity of Narwhals (Monodon Monoceros)" by K. L. Laidre, School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington (Seattle), and M. P. Heide-Jorgensen, Greenland Institute of Natural Resources, Nuuk, Greenland, Marine Mammal Science, January 2005


Comments
a nice picture of mysterious narwhal. great picture!!!
Posted by abigail liang on April 21,2009 | 05:44PM
I so enjoyed reading the article on the narwhal. We have a floor lamp made from a narwhal tusk. My husband's grandfather was a sea captain in the early 1900s and brought it home to Yarmouth NS, Canada where someone had it wired and made into a lamp which we use every day. I would be interested to know if this is legal to sell because of the age. My husband and i are in our 70s and 80s so we might possibly have an auction in the near future.
Posted by Marcie Rogers on April 23,2009 | 07:32AM
Marcie, The author advised in the article that "It has been illegal to import narwhal tusk into the United States since the 1972 Marine Mammal Protection Act, but material known to have entered the nation earlier can be bought and sold." Therefore, it would appear your fine to sell the ivory. However, if it was mine, I would hand it down to your husband's family members so his family has a connection to the past. (along with other personal effects from your husband's grandfather)
Posted by Steven Rowell on April 24,2009 | 08:35AM
Is the book Greenland's Winter Whales available in the US? It does not come up in a search of Amazon.com nor bookfinder.com Thank you.
Posted by Lee Barnhardt on April 27,2009 | 03:51PM
Just finished reading this, what an amazing story. Kudos to Ms. Laidre for taking on such an amazing and elusive animal for study. Such single minded focus, I hope that her efforts are rewarded handsomely and the scientific community benefits from her efforts.
Posted by Gene Harrison on April 27,2009 | 07:33PM
What majestic creatures!
Posted by Katie on April 29,2009 | 08:34AM
Marcie Rogers--instead of seeking to profit from your narwhal tush, why don't you donate it to a museum or place like the Smithsonian so future generations and the scientific community can benefit?
Posted by Melitta on May 1,2009 | 08:57AM
Congrats to Ms. Laidre, I know her from UW and the professor she worked with and being a fellow dancer turned scientist she has inspired me to keep doing both, which I am equally passionate about although my animal is Killer Whales.
Posted by Kailey Genther on May 3,2009 | 10:26PM
awww. i want a narwhal
Posted by melissa on May 4,2009 | 10:13AM
A fantastic piece of writing.
Posted by Chris on May 7,2009 | 07:25AM
I hope she never catches this animal, because their goals are too cruel.
Posted by Nikita Kondraskov on May 7,2009 | 05:46PM
Very revealing. The resemblance between narwhal tusks and the unicorn horns seen in paintings is remarkable.
Posted by Cleve on May 8,2009 | 11:20AM
Thanks I so surprised and enjoyed reading about narwhal and Kristin Laidre.I wish all the best to Kristin.
Posted by Piret Kerem on May 12,2009 | 11:23PM
Not only did I enjoy the topic of this article, but I was thoroughly impressed by how well-written it was. It reads like a story. Now who to root for: Laidre for her perseverance or the narwhal to maintain their fairytale mystery?
Posted by Julie on May 19,2009 | 05:09PM
Do You Think We Should Hunt Narwhals? i vote No GO NARWHALS!!!
Posted by on October 9,2009 | 03:52AM
Unicorn of the sea?
I disagree, they are more like the Jedi of the sea.
.... And inventors of the shish-kebab.
Posted by Krev Zabijak on October 25,2009 | 05:18PM