Whale of a Tale
When Luna, a people-loving orca, chose Vancouver Island's Nootka Sound for his home, he set in motion a drama of leviathan proportions
- By Michael Parfit
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2004, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 6)
And when the Uchuck was told to stop pausing to play with Luna, Donna Schneider got angry. “How do they know that it’s wrong to interact with a whale?” she said later.
The answer, like almost everything with Luna, is complicated. Usually animals only associate with humans when people bring food. But dolphins and whales, more than most other animals, occasionally seem interested in making contact with people simply for social reasons.
Around the world, a number of wild dolphins have chosen to spend time with people, and in recent years a few beluga whales have done the same thing. One of these, a beluga nicknamed Poco, has been associating with people on the east coasts of both Canada and the United States for the past year.
But in spite of the occasional success story, the outcome of these encounters is rarely happy. “In general,” says biologist Toni Frohoff, “the more contact the animal has with people, the more likely it is for people or the animal to become injured.” Frohoff is a marine mammal biologist in WashingtonState who studies what she calls solitary sociables, whales or dolphins on their own who choose to associate with people. She describes the relationships that develop as complex and risky. People, she said, tend to think of these mammals like domestic animals or even toys, but “cetaceans are probably expecting people to behave like cetaceans.” Frustration ensues, encounters are sometimes more dangerous than fun, and often the animal is injured or simply disappears. While researching a paper for the International Whaling Commission, Frohoff came to a stark conclusion: “The animals that had the most contact with humans had the least likelihood of survival.”
This fear fed an effort, led by a phalanx of whale advocacy groups from both sides of the border, to move Luna back to his pod. They argued that in associating with people, Luna was a danger to himself and others; if he were returned to his pod, he would be important as a breeding male; and if he were to live again with whales, his interest in people would probably fade. The groups demanded that Luna be somehow reunited with his pod as soon as possible and in the meantime that people be kept away from him.
During the next several months, two people were arrested and convicted of having broken the law by petting Luna. Aboater allegedly hit Luna with a board to try to get him to move. Luna himself made things more complicated by spending a lot of time at the Gold River dock, where, when Thorburn or his colleagues weren’t there to chase people off, he would delight visitors by moving from boat to boat, touching people’s hands, playing with fenders and hoses, and bobbing up to nuzzle their startled dogs.
But the whale advocacy organizations kept up a steady drumbeat of emotional demands—“He’s going downhill fast,” said one campaigner—that Luna be moved. Though biologists resist describing animal behavior in human terms, the campaign helped itself along by calling Luna lonely. Ed Thorburn contributed: “I see a sadness in his eyes,” he wrote. “I truly believe he is very depressed.”
In October 2003, the DFO, in collaboration with the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service, decided to make a move. If Luna’s pod swam near Nootka Sound, the two groups later announced, Thorburn would try to take Luna to a reunion by leading him out to the open sea where he could hear his family’s calls. Otherwise a team of aquarium experts would catch him in a net pen, hoist him into a truck, and drive him to a pen closer to his pod’s home ground, where he’d be released when he made an acoustic connection.
Whale advocacy groups were happy, but GoldRiver residents had mixed feelings. Some people were glad, but others were suspicious that it was all just cover for a scheme to sell Luna to an aquarium. (The DFO said that permanent captivity was an option, but only as a last resort. It denied any conspiracy.) Others thought science was being arrogant.
A sign appeared in a deli window. Under the heading “Luna vs. Human Assumptions,” a French-Canadian woman wrote: “[W]e can conclude . . . that whales are intelligent, social, affectionate. Do we know their thoughts, language, and feelings? . . . Who are we to disturb nature’s course and determine what is best for him?”
It was clear that the Mowachaht/Muchalaht people did not want Luna moved, but nobody knew if they were going to do anything about it. Mike Maquinna said to reporters only that “nature should take its course.” Ed Thorburn did not see any threat from the natives. “My own personal belief is that they won’t interfere,” he said.
On a warm May evening Luna came into the GoldRiver docks and moved restlessly from boat to boat. The people on the dock laughed when he played with a boat’s hose, bending it around so it squirted straight up in the air. Some of us could not help but detect humanlike feelings. Suzanne found it poignant: “He just seems so desperate for company.”
A few days later, as the men started to put together a pen near the dock, Suzanne and I climbed a hill with Lisa Larsson. She had kept detailed logs of Luna’s calls for a research project run by an organization called OrcaLab, which monitors whales near northern Vancouver Island, and specializes, in part, in studying their calls. Larsson joked that after months of listening to Luna, she felt like his nanny. She was strongly in favor of his reuniting with his pod, she said, but she was uncomfortable about the way the DFO was going about it.
The big net trap, the hoist cranes and a plan to bolt a tag to his dorsal fin bothered her. “It would be so much nicer not to cause him any distress,” she said. Like almost everyone, Larsson hoped that Luna’s pod would swim near Nootka Sound on its way to its summer home, so that he could just be led out to meet his family. Thorburn shared that wish. For weeks, he had been teaching Luna to follow the Rugged Point, so he could take him to a reunion. But the pod didn’t swim nearby. So it was decided that Thorburn would have to lead Luna to the pen instead.
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Comments (9)
What a beautiful story. I only wish I could help Luna or even know what the right thing to do is. As was said above, "he was a gift to us" Thank you.
Posted by Ms. Mercer Ervin on April 27,2012 | 11:46 AM
There are times when close interspecies contacts occur. It has been so throughout our history and will continue to do so. Usually by happenstance, but sometimes by design. Whose design is the question and for what purpose? It is my belief that when meetings of this sort occur they are part of a grander plan than we might normally think. Meetings of this sort have been occurring and usually to the detriment of the non human species. Look at whales in general and our exploitation of their social behavior. There are exceptions, unfortunately for Luna, in the end, he wasn't. His interactions with humans were chosen by his own intention and the interplay between us and him have led us all to appreciate that we share this planet with other intelligent beings. As such, it is our responsibility to see that all living creatures have the opportunity for a full and free life. That includes all our fellow mankind as well. Luna's legacy will be the gift of introspection and where we fit into the grander scheme of life.
Posted by Steven Carter on July 15,2011 | 01:29 PM
I Haven't heard of Luna before his article was in the Smith-sonian magaZine. I fell completly in love with Luna. I felt so sad that he lost his pod. It would have made a very happy ending with him rejoining his pod. I have not seen the movie yet, when it comes, I am definately going to see it.
Posted by Geri Brown on July 15,2011 | 10:59 AM
I can't wait to see the movie. What a tragedy. Such a real and heart warming story. We need more of these in our lives. I hope we learn from this mistake. I wonder if the indians are aware of what they did that didn't keep Luna safe.
Posted by Annette Scott on June 29,2011 | 11:39 AM
This story leaves us closer to the end but not at the end. Knowing now what happened to Luna is heartbreaking. As an animal advocate I strongly agree that Luna should have been reunited with his pod. The native intervention prevented him from being moved to safety - which tragically led to his eventual death. Situations like this will no doubt happen again. I think we need to learn from this experience. Animals need to be with their own kind. Our tendency to anthropomorphize animals is not in their best interest. He was a gift to us - not to keep for ourselves, but to return to his own species, and to ensure his happiness and safety. I hope we don't think only of our own entertainment and interests if another Luna comes our way someday. Apparently that there will be now be a film about Luna called The Whale Movie and there was the award winning original film Saving Luna.
Posted by Here&Erehwon on October 15,2010 | 05:31 PM
This story made me cry. I loved it!!!
Posted by Gena Gerhardt on March 15,2010 | 09:40 PM
Fascinating, moving story - and well-written!
Posted by Gail Trenfield on May 25,2009 | 10:05 PM
Wonderful story for these complicated times. Anthropromorphizing happens all of the time but how much of it do we really understand. I hope Luna finds his way back to his pod.
Posted by Robert Capriccio on May 25,2009 | 07:07 PM
this is wonderful!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by sarah little on April 30,2009 | 01:56 PM