Humpback Whale Research Project, Bermuda
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The Humpback Whale Research Project, Bermuda was started in 2007 by Andrew Stevenson (pictured left with Somers-3 and Elsa-8). We research and collect visual and acoustics data on the humpbacks as they migrate past Bermuda to broaden our knowledge of these magnificent animals. For the past five years, Andrew has studied the humpbacks' pelagic migratory behaviour. His initial research was conducted between Feb 2007 and Feb 2010 while making the film "Where the Whales Sing". The second phase of research started in March 2010 and will contunue until May 2013.

Marine scientists know a lot about the humpbacks in their feeding and breeding grounds closer to shore, but there is little information on the humpbacks' mid-ocean migratory behaviour. As a mid-ocean platform, Bermuda provides a unique window into the lives of the humpbacks. There are almost no other similar studies and the few that are out there are from coastal sites near to the breeding grounds and may not be typical of pelagic migration.

 

Andrew filming

More details about Andrew and his various projects and adventures are available in Andrew's bio.

Please contact us at 777 7688 if you have any sightings of whales during the winter months up to March.

Got photos of the underside of whales' flukes? ...email us at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

"It is because whales are such grand and glowing creatures that their destruction degrades us so. It will confound our descendants. We were the generation that searched Mars for the most tenuous evidence of life but couldn't rouse enough moral outrage to stop the destruction of the grandest manifestations of life here on earth.'

Dr Roger Payne

 

I wish you would use all means at your disposal — films! expeditions! the web! more! — to ignite public support for a global network of marine protected areas, hope spots large enough to save and restore the ocean, the blue heart of the planet.”.

Dr Sylvia Earle...

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Andrew's Latest Whale Diary Entry

Check out NOAA's latest satellite-tagged whale positions in the diary archives.

Where the Whales Sing wins the "Best Emerging Underwater Filmmaker" award at the BLUE Ocean Film Festival in Monterey, California.  - read more....

Where the Whales Sing wins the Masterworks Museum of Bermuda Art Charman Prize for 2011- read more...

 
2012 02 21- Entangled whale released on the Silver Bank, Dominican Republic,but will it survive? Print E-mail

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Photos of entangled whale on the Silver Bank after it was released by Conscious Breath Adventures and Aquatic Adventures. The whale is covered in sea lice, an indication of its poor state of health. It is also clearly very emaciated. Photos courtesy of Capt Gene Flipse. Detailed report below

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The Book

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The whales sing, not because they have an answer, they sing because they have a song.

Click here for more whale song

Fast Fact

Humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae) are found in all the major oceans, in a wide band running from the Antarctic ice edge to 65° N latitude, though they are not found in the eastern Mediterranean,the Baltic Sea, or the Arctic Ocean.

Recognise this fluke?

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