In Search of the Mysterious Narwhal
Ballerina turned biologist Kristin Laidre gives her all to study the elusive, deep-diving, ice-loving whale known as the "unicorn of the sea"
- By Abigail Tucker
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2009, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 6)
The scientists also screened a map of the tagged narwhal's travels, its movements traced in green. The whales can migrate more than 1,000 miles in a year. After leaving Niaqornat this one had wandered farther into the fjord in December and January, near Uummannaq, a bigger town with bars and restaurants, where many of the hunters had friends and rivals. Then in March it had turned north toward its summering grounds near Melville Bay, at which point the transmitter stopped working. The hunters eyed the crazy green zigzag with fascination. Though some had seen the data before in weekly e-mail updates from the scientists, it was still astonishing stuff. Some later said they'd enjoy daily updates: they wanted to track the narwhal like traders follow the stock market. When the hunters finally left, full of coffee, cake and respectful criticisms of Laidre's baking, the matter was decided. They would set nets in the morning.
Well, immaqa aqagu.
That evening, the temperature, which had sometimes reached the balmy 40s during the day—"Beluga weather," Heide-Jorgensen had said a bit contemptuously—plunged into the teens. Even inside the house, the cold was devouring. All night the wind whooped and the dogs sang and the waves bludgeoned the shore. By morning the dogs had curled into miserable little doughnuts in the snow. The hunters dragged their boats to higher ground. On the hills above town much of the snow had blown away, giving the black earth a dappled appearance, like narwhal skin. No nets would be set today, nor—if the weather report was accurate—for days to come.
"No nets and no underwear," said Laidre, whose personal field gear was due to arrive on a helicopter that almost certainly wouldn't show. "Life is not easy."
At times like these she almost envied colleagues who studied microscopic organisms in jars instead of whales in the raging North Atlantic. Her own brother, a graduate student at Princeton, was researching hermit crabs on the beaches of Ireland, where a cozy pub was never far away. Meanwhile, in Niaqornat, the wind was so vicious that Heide-Jorgensen got trapped in the community bathhouse for hours. The scientists took to singing the Merle Haggard song "If We Make It Through December." For days they made spreadsheets, calibrated transmitters, charged their headlamps—anything to keep busy.
There was some excitement when a young hunter, having learned that I had passed my whole life never having tasted narwhal mattak, arrived with a frozen piece from last year's harvest. (I had asked him what it tasted like, and he said, with a pitying gaze, "Mattak is mattak.") Hazelnut was not the flavor that came to my mind. But Laidre and Heide-Jorgensen tucked away great mouthfuls of the stuff, dipped in soy sauce. In the old days, foreign sailors who abstained from vitamin-C-rich whale mattak sometimes died of scurvy.
Several Niaqornat men who'd been out hunting belugas before the storm were stranded a few hundred miles away, but no one in town expressed concern; in fact, everyone seemed quite merry. Winter's arrival is good news on this part of Greenland's coast, because narwhals always follow the freeze.
The whales' fate is tied to the ice. Narwhal fossils have been found as far south as Norfolk, England, to which the ice cover extended 50,000 years ago. Ice protects narwhals from the orcas that sometimes attack their pods; the killer whales' high, stiff dorsal fins, which are like fearsome black pirate sails, prevent them from entering frozen waters. Even more important, Laidre says, narwhals beneath the pane of ice enjoy almost exclusive access to prey—particularly Greenlandic halibut, which may be why they are such gluttons in winter.
Occupying an icy world has its risks. Narwhals lingering too long in the fjords sometimes get trapped as the ice expands and the cracks shrink; they cut themselves horribly trying to breathe. In Canada this past fall, some 600 narwhals were stranded this way, doomed to drown before hunters killed them. These entrapments are called savssats, a derivative of an Inuit word meaning "to bar his way." Laidre believes that massive die-offs in savssats thousands of years ago may account for the narwhal's extraordinarily low genetic diversity.
Still, less ice could spell disaster for narwhals. Since 1979, the Arctic has lost an ice mass the size of nearly two Alaskas, and last summer saw the second-lowest ice cover on record (surpassed only by 2007). So far the water has opened mostly north of Greenland, but hunters in Niaqornat say they've noticed differences in the way their fjord freezes. Even if warming trends are somehow reversed, Laidre's polar-expert colleagues back in Seattle doubt that the ice will ever regain its former coverage area and thickness. Narwhals may be imperiled because of their genetic homogeneity, limited diet and fixed migration patterns. Laidre was the lead author of an influential paper in the journal Ecological Applications that ranked narwhals, along with polar bears and hooded seals, as the arctic species most vulnerable to climate change.
"These whales spend half the year in dense ice," she says. "As the ice's structure and timing changes, the whole oceanography, the plankton ecology, changes, and that affects their prey. Narwhals are a specialist species. Changes in the environment affect them—without a doubt—because they are not flexible."
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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 (28)
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wow, great job!
Posted by jess on January 24,2013 | 04:42 PM
Hi Abigail, A very interesting article on what is a remarkable creature. One thing I do not understand and that is the report that narwhals have lots of vitamin C in their skin and this is a source of the vitamin for the Inuit people. Now as vitamin C is not normally found in significant amounts in marine animals, do you know where the vitamin comes from? Is it synthesised by the animal or does their food contain vitamin C? Also, what is the purpose of the vitamin in skin? I have searched the scientific literature and, while there are references in Google to this, there are no reports in PubMed. Is there real scientific data on this published in the peer reviewed literature and, if there is, I would be grateful for any help. Sincerely, Professor Alfred Poulos
Posted by professor alfred poulos on January 12,2013 | 02:05 AM
yeah the story was cool but im in 5th grde and i need facts not a story teller!!!!
Posted by jsk on September 9,2012 | 04:34 PM
To the annoying middle schoolers and curious readers: (in order of helpfulness) http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/mammals/narwhal/ http://www.whalefacts.org/narwhal-facts/ http://www.arkive.org/narwhal/monodon-monoceros/ http://www.defenders.org/narwhal/basic-facts http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/whales/species/Narwhal.shtml http://www.narwhal.org/
Posted by Dr. Hanna Lee on April 23,2012 | 04:34 PM
Just wanted to revise my old comment. @ Sara: I'm in seventh grade and I’m doing a report on narwhals, too I think that Arctic residents shouldn’t hunt narwhals (AKA “corpse whale” because they float belly up). They really are beautiful creatures and so interesting. There's so much more for us to discover, I'd hate if narwhals became extinct.
Posted by Elisha B. on April 23,2012 | 03:37 PM
This article has really stuck with me over the years. A wonderful story of the mystery that remains in the world, the value of perseverance, and the amazing things that happen when life forces us to reinvent ourselves. I really enjoyed coming back and reading about the narwhals, and Kristin, again. Thank you for this excellent piece of writing.
Posted by Bethany Joy Carlson on March 4,2012 | 01:01 PM
My dream is to see a narwhal. I went to the library when I was little to study them and am now 25 with a degree in HR, my passion is animals but my intelligence does not lie in biology, unfortunately. Anyway, I want to know what it takes and where to start to see a narwhal.
Posted by Kelly c on December 27,2011 | 01:56 AM
Narwhal are indeed awesome creatures... Sara! I'm now in seventh grade and I gotta do a report on narwhal... I agree with your comment. Just so you know. You too, Kailey Genther. Killer whales rock. I should know. I live with one (please pardon the joke, you wouldn't get it unless you lived with me). Did any one of you know that Narwhal is Dutch for "corpse whale" because it has been known to float belly up as if it were a dead goldfish? Weird right? Anything that's unusual or weird is golden awesome in my book. Narwhal is running for fourth place. I agree with the other statements here. I think the Inuit and other people who live in the arctic areas should stop hunting narwhal -at least until we know a great amount more about them, like everything about them- in the meantime, they can hunt seal and whatever else they hunt for food. And we can send the oranges to take the place of the vitamin C in narwhal flesh. That would be great. There's so much more for us to discover, and I'd hate to have narwhal become extinct before we get the chance to know them, like what happened with the dinosaurs, so now were going by fossils and educated guesses. we've just barely skimmed the edge of the information the narwhal are holding back from us, we can't let it all go now! I'm just being passionate about this. Please save the narwhal. Thank you.
Posted by Elisha B. on January 16,2011 | 06:25 PM
I just happened across a Smithsonian magazine at a local grocery store and was really impressed with the article on the Narwhales. I live in Hawaii now but have a Geologist cousin named Andrea and through her traveled to Deluth, Minnisota where her and her colleagues treated me to that special warmth of Geologist hospitality so particular to that community of scientists. I take my hat off to Abigail Tucker for taking me back, but even more importantly, for showing me that insightful, well written, and inspired writing is not a lost art. My only regret is that I could not be there to watch Kristin and her friends dance, but just the same, and glad that she still can dance on a different, and probably to her, even happier terrain. I am very impressed. Keep up the good work Abigail and Kristin, and as a lady told me in a Christmas card years ago, may Jesus look after you and protect you.
Posted by Jeffrey O' Bryan on October 30,2010 | 05:25 PM
Narwhals are so cute! Yo! I'm Sara And I'm in fifth grade and need to know facts about Narwhals!!!! Please and thank you!!
Posted by Sara Clavien on October 14,2010 | 07:08 PM
wow this artical is very informative. i enjoy reading about narwhals because well i am one. (figure of speach) i like swimming and in the frozen water of the artic in search of these majestic creatures. I am thrilled to see that some one is interested in learning about narwhals as I am.
Dr. Jacob F. Isler
Posted by Dr.Jacob Isler on December 16,2009 | 11:22 AM
Narwhals are one of the animals we keep destroying, this should stop immediately!
Posted by on December 7,2009 | 03:04 PM
i AM IN MIDDLE SCHOOL AND WAS DOING A REPORT ON THIS ELAGANT MAMMALS. i AM ALMOST DONE. cAN U GIVE ME SOME INFO LIKE, NOW? I DO NOT MEAN TO BE RUDE I NEED HELP!
Posted by on December 7,2009 | 03:02 PM
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 | 08:18 PM
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