WEBVTT 00:00:09.898 --> 00:00:13.228 Off the rugged coast of the pacific northwest, 00:00:13.228 --> 00:00:17.318 pods of killer whales inhabit the frigid waters. 00:00:17.318 --> 00:00:19.538 Each family is able to survive here 00:00:19.538 --> 00:00:21.578 thanks mainly to one member, 00:00:21.578 --> 00:00:23.598 its most knowledgeable hunter: 00:00:23.598 --> 00:00:25.208 the grandmother. 00:00:25.208 --> 00:00:28.418 These matriarchs can live eighty years or more, 00:00:28.418 --> 00:00:31.508 while most males die off in their thirties. 00:00:31.508 --> 00:00:34.608 Though killer whales inhabit every major ocean, 00:00:34.608 --> 00:00:37.658 until recently we knew very little about them. 00:00:37.658 --> 00:00:40.518 The details of their lives eluded scientists 00:00:40.518 --> 00:00:44.028 until an organization called the Center for Whale Research 00:00:44.028 --> 00:00:46.608 began studying a single population 00:00:46.608 --> 00:00:51.378 near Washington State and British Columbia in 1976. 00:00:51.378 --> 00:00:52.978 Thanks to their on going work, 00:00:52.978 --> 00:00:55.368 we’ve learned a great deal about these whales, 00:00:55.368 --> 00:00:57.768 known as the Southern Residents. 00:00:57.768 --> 00:00:59.008 And the more we learn, 00:00:59.008 --> 00:01:04.388 the more this population’s elders’ vital role comes into focus. 00:01:04.388 --> 00:01:07.072 Each grandmother starts her life as a calf 00:01:07.072 --> 00:01:10.882 born into her mother’s family group, or matriline. 00:01:10.882 --> 00:01:12.942 The family does everything together, 00:01:12.942 --> 00:01:18.202 hunting and playing, even communicating through their own unique set of calls. 00:01:18.202 --> 00:01:23.922 Both sons and daughters spend their entire lives with their mothers’ families. 00:01:23.922 --> 00:01:28.152 That doesn’t mean a young whale only interacts with her relatives. 00:01:28.152 --> 00:01:30.382 Besides their own special calls, 00:01:30.382 --> 00:01:33.912 her matriline shares a dialect with nearby families, 00:01:33.912 --> 00:01:35.992 and they socialize regularly. 00:01:35.992 --> 00:01:39.082 Once a female reaches age fifteen or so, 00:01:39.082 --> 00:01:43.512 these meetings become opportunities to mate with males from other groups. 00:01:43.512 --> 00:01:46.432 The relationships don’t go much beyond mating— 00:01:46.432 --> 00:01:49.032 she and her calves stay with her family, 00:01:49.032 --> 00:01:52.022 while the male returns to his own mother. 00:01:52.022 --> 00:01:54.282 Until approximately age forty, 00:01:54.282 --> 00:01:57.822 she gives birth every 6 years on average. 00:01:57.822 --> 00:02:00.292 Then, she goes through menopause— 00:02:00.292 --> 00:02:03.622 which is almost unheard of in the animal kingdom. 00:02:03.622 --> 00:02:07.242 In fact, humans, killer whales and a few other whales 00:02:07.242 --> 00:02:11.232 are the only species whose females continue to live for years 00:02:11.232 --> 00:02:14.002 after they stop reproducing. 00:02:14.002 --> 00:02:15.232 After menopause, 00:02:15.232 --> 00:02:18.452 grandmothers take the lead hunting for salmon, 00:02:18.452 --> 00:02:21.112 the Southern Residents’ main food source. 00:02:21.112 --> 00:02:23.622 Most of the winter they forage offshore, 00:02:23.622 --> 00:02:26.092 supplementing salmon with other fish. 00:02:26.092 --> 00:02:30.312 But when the salmon head towards shore in droves to spawn 00:02:30.312 --> 00:02:32.612 the killer whales follow. 00:02:32.612 --> 00:02:34.752 The matriarch shows the younger whales 00:02:34.752 --> 00:02:37.882 where to find the most fertile fishing grounds. 00:02:37.882 --> 00:02:42.772 She also shares up to 90% of the salmon she catches. 00:02:42.772 --> 00:02:44.242 With each passing year, 00:02:44.242 --> 00:02:46.792 her contributions become more vital: 00:02:46.792 --> 00:02:51.872 overfishing and habitat destruction have decimated salmon populations, 00:02:51.872 --> 00:02:56.152 putting the whales at near-constant risk of starvation. 00:02:56.156 --> 00:02:58.006 These grandmothers’ expertise 00:02:58.006 --> 00:03:01.906 can mean the difference between life and death for their families– 00:03:01.906 --> 00:03:04.196 but why do they stop having calves? 00:03:04.196 --> 00:03:08.656 It’s almost always advantageous for a female to continue reproducing, 00:03:08.656 --> 00:03:12.786 even if she also cares for her existing children and grandchildren. 00:03:12.786 --> 00:03:17.406 A couple unique circumstances change this equation for killer whales. 00:03:17.406 --> 00:03:20.416 The fact that neither sons or daughters 00:03:20.416 --> 00:03:23.636 leave their families of origin is extremely rare— 00:03:23.636 --> 00:03:26.036 in almost all animal species, 00:03:26.036 --> 00:03:28.786 one or both sexes disperse. 00:03:28.786 --> 00:03:31.926 This means that as a female killer whale ages, 00:03:31.926 --> 00:03:33.886 a greater percentage of her family 00:03:33.886 --> 00:03:36.596 consists of her children and grandchildren, 00:03:36.596 --> 00:03:39.416 while more distant relatives die off. 00:03:39.416 --> 00:03:44.126 Because older females are more closely related to the group than younger females, 00:03:44.126 --> 00:03:47.511 they do best to invest in the family as a whole, 00:03:47.511 --> 00:03:51.231 whereas younger females should invest in reproducing. 00:03:51.231 --> 00:03:52.911 In the killer whale’s environment, 00:03:52.911 --> 00:03:55.591 every new calf is another mouth to feed 00:03:55.591 --> 00:03:58.301 on limited, shared resources. 00:03:58.301 --> 00:04:02.581 An older female can further her genes without burdening her family 00:04:02.581 --> 00:04:04.761 by supporting her adult sons, 00:04:04.761 --> 00:04:07.801 who sire calves other families will raise. 00:04:07.801 --> 00:04:10.231 This might be why the females have evolved 00:04:10.231 --> 00:04:14.321 to stop reproducing entirely in middle age. 00:04:14.321 --> 00:04:16.802 Even with the grandmothers’ contributions, 00:04:16.802 --> 00:04:20.202 the Southern Resident killer whales are critically endangered, 00:04:20.202 --> 00:04:23.052 largely due to a decline in salmon. 00:04:23.052 --> 00:04:26.562 We urgently need to invest in restoring salmon populations 00:04:26.562 --> 00:04:28.442 to save them from extinction. 00:04:28.442 --> 00:04:32.742 In the long term, we’ll need more studies like the Center for Whale Research’s. 00:04:32.742 --> 00:04:34.982 What we’ve learned about the Southern Residents 00:04:34.982 --> 00:04:37.172 may not hold true for other groups. 00:04:37.172 --> 00:04:39.612 By studying other populations closely, 00:04:39.612 --> 00:04:42.602 we might uncover more startling adaptations, 00:04:42.196 --> 00:04:46.156 and anticipate their vulnerabilities to human interference 00:04:46.156 --> 00:04:49.306 before their survival is at risk.