For the orca, so few in number, every hunt carries a risk. Each swing of the humpbacks’ fins could injure them reducing their ability to find a meal next time. The orca rely on each other, each having a job in the attack, without numbers winning is difficult. Their tactics have been consistent. Some, principally the smaller ones, distract the humpback mother whilst the large male orca use their heads like battering rams to kill the young humpbacks.
Our team was equipped with equipment not used here before, in particular a robust, stabilised underwater camera rig that was purpose built to be able to film underwater at high speed and give new insights into how the orca work together, using their mammalian intelligence and communication to overcome an adversary many times their size.
So, when we encountered a group of just three orca intercepting a mother humpback and her calf, along with an adult male escort, we expected to see little or no action. But as our drone tracked the humpbacks, the orca executed an entirely new tactic, one never seen before by the scientists and filmed by the camera team for the very first time… The orca kidnapped the calf.
After following the humpbacks, and waiting for the right opportunity, the three orca seized the calf at speed. Our boat moved in to film the action under the surface, uncovering the remarkable physics of the kidnap. The orca take the calf away by carrying it in their slipstream, with it riding on the wake behind their fins. This completely new methodology shocked the crew and underlined just how incredible mammals are; when presented with a problem they can design, communicate and execute a plan as a team.
This new behaviour may simply be an evolution of tactics in the light of falling orca numbers here, or they could be old behaviours, rising again now that whale numbers have recovered post the ban on commercial whaling. John has yet to find a concrete answer. But it's exciting that one of our greatest living predators, and one of most intelligent animals on earth, is still surprising us, and it is the work of John and other scientists that enables us to share in these remarkable stories, and by working in partnership with the BBC, our shared observations can be used to try and better understand these remarkable mammals.