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Status of Whale Populations

This webpage includes population status assessments presented in a unique new format that is both detailed and accessible. Additional assessments will be added as they are completed and endorsed. These assessments represent the Scientific Committee's best judgements about the status of whale populations. 

Click here for explanatory information about this table

 
The table below summarizes status using two measures from such stock assessments: Relative Abundance and 20-Year Change. Since many whale populations were severely depleted during the period of commercial whaling, the Scientific Committee usually expresses Relative Abundance as a proportion of the estimated number of whales prior to whaling, but sometimes it is expressed as a proportion of the number the habitat is likely able to support (‘carrying capacity’). With a changing environment,   carrying capacity may change, so a reference year is sometimes specified. Usually the pre-exploitation abundance is assumed to have equalled carrying capacity then. Thus, a Relative Abundance value of 0.50 means that models indicate that the whale population is half as numerous now as it was prior to whaling, or as the habitat could now support, depending on which type of reference level is used.
 
The 20-Year Change statistic is based on model estimates of how much the population abundance has changed over the last 20 years. Negative values mean that the stock has declined and positive values mean the population is increasing. A value near zero is not necessarily concerning since a population near carrying capacity will remain stable (near zero growth) but its status would be very good.
 
 

Species

Population or Area

Relative Abundance

20-Year Change

 

Gray Whale
published: 2024

 

Picture3.png

Increased from historically depleted levels and now stable although recently experiencing some fluctuation due to changes in prey availability and sea ice.

More information in the Status Summary 

Eastern North Pacific

Relative Abundance

GOOD 

 

rainbow

20-Year Change

STABLE

 

rainbow

 

Common Minke Whale
published 2024

 

Picture7

Generally abundant, mostly recovered and slowly increasing.

 

More information in the Status Summary

North Atlantic

Relative Abundance 
VERY GOOD

 

NA minke RA rainbowplot 2024

20-Year Change

STABLE

 

NA minke RC rainbowplot 2024

Vaquita
published 2024

vaquita adult and calf 40ptImmediate danger of extinction, with only about 10 remaining animals observed since 2018.

More information in the Status Summary

Gulf of California

Relative Abundance

VERY LOW

 

RA rainbow vaquita 2024 white

20-Year Change

STRONGLY DECREASED

 

RC rainbow vaquita 2024 white new 002


Please note that this is an ongoing and long-term project. More population status assessments will be added in due course. 
If the population you are interested in is not yet included here, you may find it in our short status summaries.