Cetacean Health: using imagery to understand the health of killer whales
Photo by Lance Barrett-Lennard / Ocean Wise.
Our annual monitoring program, in collaboration with OceanWise Research, assesses the health of whales. Every year we take aerial photos of individually identified resident killer whales with small, minimally invasive drones, and use photogrammetry to accurately measure the whales’ body condition and growth rates, and determine whether they are pregnant. Our measurements provide a direct indication of the whales’ nutritional status and allow us to draw reliable inferences about their overall health. The value of this research is that it allows us to assess the impact of salmon abundance–which is strongly influenced by human fisheries–on the whale’s reproduction and survival.


Applied research
Findings from the photogrammetry research thus far helped motivate increased restrictions on sport and commercial fisheries in Canada, as well as the creation of sanctuary zones where the whales can forage without disturbance by boats. It also provided valuable insights into Chinook stocks of greatest importance to Southern Residents–an analysis we plan to begin shortly with Northern Residents. The time series of body condition measurements on both populations becomes more valuable with each passing year.
Project history
In 2014, Lance Barrett-Lennard worked with Washington-based research colleagues, Drs. John Durban and Holly Fearnbach, to develop a photogrammetry-based method of assessing the body condition of killer whales using aerial photographs from minimally invasive, boat launched drones. The study was a key recommendation of a US/Canadian panel attempting to assess the impact of salmon fisheries on Southern Resident killer whales.
The project grew into an annual monitoring program, monitoring Northern and Southern Resident killer whales and Bigg’s killer whales opportunistically. Comparing the two populations, one in perilous condition and the other recovering, has helped make it possible and practical to determine when killer whales are nutritionally stressed, and to assess the impacts of such stress on survival and reproduction.

Recent articles
Coring for Answers
When I saw Owikeeno Lake from the plane my jaw…
A Little Wolf Mystery, Part I
I needed a renewal. Spring had sprung some time ago…
The Magic of Hecate Strait
There are some places in this world that can expand…
Creature of the Coast
Fifteen-month old Callum is a creature of the coast. He…
Seeing is Believing
A personal understanding of the places we are trying to…
The Secret Life of Salmon
With each step my foot sinks into a thick mat…
A critical assessment of the BC Central Coast Land & Resource Management Plan
This report is a critical assessment of protection for key…
Scientific Criteria for Evaluation and Establishment of Grizzly Bear Management Areas (2004)
Grizzly Bear Management Areas (GBMAs) have been a focal part…




