Tahlequah, an orca that carried her dead calf for 17 days and more than 1,000 miles in 2018, lost another calf recently and ...
Tahlequah first garnered worldwide recognition in 2018 when the killer whale carried her dead calf on the back for 17 days.
Southern resident orca Tahlequah is suffering the loss of yet another calf. Here's where she and her deceased calf have been ...
Tahlequah, the Southern Resident killer whale who famously carried her deceased calf for 17 days in 2018, has tragically lost her newest offspring. Tahlequah, a female orca born around 1998, endured ...
In 2018, researchers observed J35 pushing her dead calf along for 17 days, propping it up for more than 1,000 miles.
An endangered orca who carried her dead calf for over two weeks in 2018 is doing so once again following the death of her new calf.
Tahlequah has continued to carry her lost ... give birth to just one calf roughly every five years. But the Center for Whale Research has observed that many southern resident females are not ...
As a result of this most recent death, Tahlequah has lost two out of four documented calves – both of which were female, according to the Center for Whale Research. Tahlequah last gave birth to ...
An endangered Pacific Northwest orca that carried her dead calf for over two weeks in 2018 is doing so once again following ...
The CWR said this behavior was seen previously in 2018 when she carried the body of her dead calf for 17 days.
The orca who captured global attention in 2018 by carrying her deceased calf for 17 days has faced another heartbreaking loss.
The mother orca, known as Tahlequah or J35, has been seen carrying the body of the deceased female calf since Wednesday, the Washington state-based Center for Whale Research said in a Facebook post.