Three years of “health check-ups” on Oregon’s summer resident gray whales shows a compelling relationship between whales’ overall body condition and changing ocean conditions that likely limited availability of prey for the mammals, a new study from Oregon State University indicates.
- About
- Education
- Outreach
- Research
- Cetacean Conservation and Genomics Lab
- Geospatial Ecology of Marine Megafauna Lab
- Laboratory for Animal Behavioral Interaction Research in the Ocean
- Marine Mammal Bioacoustics and Ecology Lab
- Ocean Ecology Laboratory
- Oregon Marine Mammal Stranding Network
- Whale Habitat, Ecology, and Telemetry Lab
- Marine Mammals and Offshore Wind
- Vessel
- Ways to Help
- Whale License Plate
- Staff & Student Resources