1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:03,216 The magnificent coastal waters of British Columbia are home 2 00:00:03,216 --> 00:00:05,625 to an abundance of incredible marine wildlife 3 00:00:05,935 --> 00:00:08,208 including humpback whales, steller sea lions, 4 00:00:08,208 --> 00:00:11,208 orcas, porpoises, and harbour seals. 5 00:00:11,208 --> 00:00:15,625 The BC coast is also home to one of the most iconic, recognizable 6 00:00:15,625 --> 00:00:17,625 and lovable aquatic mammals: 7 00:00:17,625 --> 00:00:19,000 the sea otter. 8 00:00:19,000 --> 00:00:20,500 With its long whiskers and 9 00:00:20,500 --> 00:00:22,208 grizzled facial fur, 10 00:00:22,208 --> 00:00:25,000 these endearing animals have fittingly earned the nickname: 11 00:00:25,000 --> 00:00:26,666 the “old man of the sea”. 12 00:00:27,066 --> 00:00:28,738 But despite their cute appearance 13 00:00:28,738 --> 00:00:29,905 and engaging antics, 14 00:00:29,905 --> 00:00:31,450 sea otters have actually endured 15 00:00:31,450 --> 00:00:33,500 a long dark history in North America, 16 00:00:33,780 --> 00:00:36,708 once pushed to the very brink of extinction. 17 00:00:36,938 --> 00:00:38,333 My name is John E. Marriott, 18 00:00:38,333 --> 00:00:40,333 and this episode, we’re EXPOSING you 19 00:00:40,333 --> 00:00:43,416 to one of Canada’s great environmental success stories: 20 00:00:43,816 --> 00:00:46,900 the miraculous recovery of the once-extirpated sea otter 21 00:00:47,391 --> 00:00:48,458 on the BC coast. 22 00:00:49,135 --> 00:00:56,095 (Music) 23 00:01:02,553 --> 00:01:03,601 Sea otters are unique 24 00:01:03,601 --> 00:01:05,310 in that they're the smallest member 25 00:01:05,310 --> 00:01:06,728 of the marine mammal family, 26 00:01:06,728 --> 00:01:09,016 yet also the largest member of the weasel family. 27 00:01:09,726 --> 00:01:12,465 Found around sheltered islands, reefs, fjords, and bays, 28 00:01:13,155 --> 00:01:15,196 sea otters feed on a variety of seafood, 29 00:01:15,196 --> 00:01:18,666 including clams, mussels, crabs and sea urchins. 30 00:01:18,666 --> 00:01:20,416 It’s not uncommon for sea otters 31 00:01:20,416 --> 00:01:22,500 to float around in the water on their back 32 00:01:22,500 --> 00:01:23,936 with their food on their belly 33 00:01:23,936 --> 00:01:25,668 like a picnic spread on a table, 34 00:01:25,668 --> 00:01:26,671 and remarkably, 35 00:01:26,671 --> 00:01:28,795 they’re one of the only animals in the world 36 00:01:28,795 --> 00:01:30,545 to use tools like we do. 37 00:01:30,625 --> 00:01:33,125 Using rocks and other objects to crack, 38 00:01:33,125 --> 00:01:34,750 open their hard-shelled food 39 00:01:34,750 --> 00:01:36,625 to get at the yummy stuff inside. 40 00:01:36,625 --> 00:01:38,875 Sea otters require a ton of food 41 00:01:38,875 --> 00:01:42,041 to stay warm in the cold, coastal pacific waters 42 00:01:42,041 --> 00:01:44,083 and eat up to 30% 43 00:01:44,083 --> 00:01:46,275 of their body weight every single day. 44 00:01:46,805 --> 00:01:48,211 Unlike other marine mammals, 45 00:01:48,211 --> 00:01:50,256 they don’t actually have a lot of body fat 46 00:01:50,256 --> 00:01:51,356 to insulate themselves, 47 00:01:51,356 --> 00:01:53,797 which is why they have one of the thickest fur coats 48 00:01:53,797 --> 00:01:54,845 in the animal kingdom, 49 00:01:54,845 --> 00:01:56,423 made up of two types of hair: 50 00:01:56,423 --> 00:01:58,338 long, sparse guard hairs 51 00:01:58,338 --> 00:02:02,875 and feathery-soft, super dense warm underfur. 52 00:02:02,875 --> 00:02:06,666 Unfortunately, it's these beautiful, luxurious coats 53 00:02:06,666 --> 00:02:08,950 that are the very reason sea otters once vanished 54 00:02:08,950 --> 00:02:11,560 from British Columbia and Canada altogether. 55 00:02:12,900 --> 00:02:15,291 Before the fur trade began in the early 1800s, 56 00:02:15,291 --> 00:02:17,708 the world’s sea otter population was estimated 57 00:02:17,708 --> 00:02:21,791 at between 150,000 and 300,000 animals. 58 00:02:22,121 --> 00:02:24,741 But by the early 1900s, just a century later, 59 00:02:24,741 --> 00:02:27,458 the population had been totally decimated 60 00:02:27,458 --> 00:02:30,230 by our insatiable appetite for their fur 61 00:02:30,620 --> 00:02:32,666 and less than 2,000 animals remained. 62 00:02:33,436 --> 00:02:34,676 Eventually, the sea otter 63 00:02:34,676 --> 00:02:36,666 disappeared from the BC Coast completely 64 00:02:37,186 --> 00:02:38,298 The last otter shot 65 00:02:38,298 --> 00:02:41,708 and killed off Vancouver Island in 1929. 66 00:02:42,218 --> 00:02:44,283 The long road to recovery for our sea otters 67 00:02:44,283 --> 00:02:46,171 began with the combined efforts 68 00:02:46,171 --> 00:02:48,221 of federal, state and provincial governments 69 00:02:48,221 --> 00:02:50,333 in both Canada and the United States. 70 00:02:50,846 --> 00:02:53,083 Between 1969 and 1972, 71 00:02:53,693 --> 00:02:55,500 89 sea otters from Alaska 72 00:02:55,500 --> 00:02:57,375 were released in Checleset Bay 73 00:02:57,375 --> 00:02:59,708 off the west coast of Vancouver Island. 74 00:03:00,288 --> 00:03:02,166 Amazingly, this reintroduced population 75 00:03:02,166 --> 00:03:05,678 prospered almost immediately in the superb coastal habitat 76 00:03:06,192 --> 00:03:07,250 and by 1996, 77 00:03:07,250 --> 00:03:11,250 had doubled more than 4x to over 1500 otters. 78 00:03:11,970 --> 00:03:14,348 The stunning initial success of the reintroduction 79 00:03:14,348 --> 00:03:16,250 led the federal government to downgrade 80 00:03:16,250 --> 00:03:18,666 the sea otters’ status as a species at risk 81 00:03:18,666 --> 00:03:20,916 from ‘endangered’ to ‘threatened’. 82 00:03:20,916 --> 00:03:25,316 By 2004, the population had expanded even more dramatically, 83 00:03:25,887 --> 00:03:29,698 with sea otters found as far south as Vargas Island in Clayoquot Sound, 84 00:03:30,491 --> 00:03:33,075 as far north as the northern tip of Vancouver Island 85 00:03:33,075 --> 00:03:35,458 at Cape Scott., and as far east as 86 00:03:35,458 --> 00:03:37,887 Hope Island in Queen Charlotte Strait. 87 00:03:38,703 --> 00:03:40,296 Today, sea otters have expanded 88 00:03:40,296 --> 00:03:42,165 even further afield in British Columbia 89 00:03:42,535 --> 00:03:44,253 and their status has been downgraded 90 00:03:44,253 --> 00:03:46,866 from a ‘threatened’ species to one of ‘special concern’. 91 00:03:46,866 --> 00:03:48,791 Their continued recovery and expansion 92 00:03:48,791 --> 00:03:50,156 on the West Canadian coast 93 00:03:50,156 --> 00:03:52,961 is now considered one of the most successful 94 00:03:52,961 --> 00:03:55,250 mammal reintroductions in Canadian history! 95 00:03:56,100 --> 00:03:58,590 But this astonishing success story doesn’t end there: 96 00:03:58,910 --> 00:04:00,958 sea otters are known as a ‘keystone species’ 97 00:04:00,958 --> 00:04:03,000 meaning that even a small number of them 98 00:04:03,000 --> 00:04:06,125 can have a dramatic effect on shaping healthy ecosystems. 99 00:04:07,215 --> 00:04:09,618 If we look back at when sea otters were eradicated, 100 00:04:10,008 --> 00:04:12,222 rocks and reefs quickly became overrun 101 00:04:12,532 --> 00:04:14,333 with dense populations of sea urchins 102 00:04:14,933 --> 00:04:17,733 and these sea urchins in turn wiped out the kelp forests 103 00:04:18,243 --> 00:04:20,313 that are so critical to our ocean’s health, 104 00:04:20,883 --> 00:04:23,923 essentially removing the ‘rainforests of the sea’ 105 00:04:24,583 --> 00:04:27,333 so called because of the kelp forests’ ability 106 00:04:27,333 --> 00:04:31,388 to provide food, shelter, oxygen and a nursery environment 107 00:04:31,388 --> 00:04:33,173 for a wide variety of sea life. 108 00:04:34,823 --> 00:04:36,340 So with sea otters reintroduced 109 00:04:36,340 --> 00:04:38,173 and reoccupying their former habitat 110 00:04:38,623 --> 00:04:43,050 and resuming their crucial role in the ecology of BC’s coastal ecosystems, 111 00:04:43,446 --> 00:04:45,658 the environmental spin-off has been remarkable: 112 00:04:46,048 --> 00:04:48,138 the out-of-control sea urchin populations 113 00:04:48,138 --> 00:04:49,998 have been brought back under contrtol, 114 00:04:49,998 --> 00:04:52,371 and the kelp forests have returned and flourished, 115 00:04:53,011 --> 00:04:54,665 completely reshaping our coast 116 00:04:54,665 --> 00:04:55,700 in a wonderful way. 117 00:04:57,310 --> 00:04:59,373 Despite the success of their reintroduction, 118 00:04:59,543 --> 00:05:01,813 sea otters continue to face a number of threats. 119 00:05:02,403 --> 00:05:05,166 The most serious is from environmental contaminants 120 00:05:05,166 --> 00:05:06,178 like oil spills. 121 00:05:06,868 --> 00:05:08,881 Oil spills are catastrophic for sea otters 122 00:05:09,571 --> 00:05:12,348 their fur loses its buoyancy and insulating capabilities 123 00:05:12,778 --> 00:05:14,916 and the otters end up dying from exposure. 124 00:05:15,436 --> 00:05:17,303 Those otters that do survive initially, 125 00:05:17,673 --> 00:05:19,640 end up inhaling and ingesting oil 126 00:05:19,640 --> 00:05:21,536 when they groom their oil-slicked fur 127 00:05:21,966 --> 00:05:23,178 causing even more deaths. 128 00:05:24,018 --> 00:05:26,078 Not surprisingly, the sea otter populations 129 00:05:26,078 --> 00:05:28,458 took almost three decades to recover 130 00:05:28,458 --> 00:05:31,881 from the Exxon-Valdez spill off the coast of Alaska. 131 00:05:33,125 --> 00:05:34,191 For these reasons 132 00:05:34,524 --> 00:05:37,416 it's critical that we continue to protect sea otter habitat 133 00:05:37,866 --> 00:05:39,831 and continue to monitor and reduce 134 00:05:39,831 --> 00:05:41,855 the risk of oil spills along the BC coast. 135 00:05:43,365 --> 00:05:44,748 Thanks for watching everyone, 136 00:05:44,748 --> 00:05:46,350 we really appreciate the support! 137 00:05:46,565 --> 00:05:48,530 Please let us know what you thought about 138 00:05:48,530 --> 00:05:50,150 the episode in the comments below, 139 00:05:50,150 --> 00:05:51,555 and don’t forget to subscribe 140 00:05:51,555 --> 00:05:53,410 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