Large numbers of humpback whales have returned to NYC for the first time in a century

Authored by seattlepi.com and submitted by cheechssoup

Large numbers of humpback whales have returned to NYC for the first time in a century

Photo: Artie Raslich/Getty Images Image 1 of / 8 Caption Close Image 1 of 8 A humpback whale spyhops off Rockaway Peninsula with the Empire State Building in the background September 23, 2013 in the Rockaway Beach neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. A humpback whale spyhops off Rockaway Peninsula with the Empire State Building in the background September 23, 2013 in the Rockaway Beach neighborhood of the Queens borough of New York City. Photo: Artie Raslich/Getty Images Image 2 of 8 A humpback whale tail slaps off Navasink Beach in Asbury Park, New Jersey. A humpback whale tail slaps off Navasink Beach in Asbury Park, New Jersey. Photo: Artie Raslich/Getty Images Image 3 of 8 A humpback whale swims off Rockaway Peninsula with One World Trade Center in the background. A humpback whale swims off Rockaway Peninsula with One World Trade Center in the background. Photo: Artie Raslich/Getty Images Image 4 of 8 A humpback whale lunge feeding off NYC's Rockaway Peninsula with Rockaway Beach in the background. A humpback whale lunge feeding off NYC's Rockaway Peninsula with Rockaway Beach in the background. Photo: Artie Raslich/Getty Images Image 5 of 8 A pair of humpback whales lunge feeding off NYC's Rockaway Peninsula with Midtown Manhattan in the background. A pair of humpback whales lunge feeding off NYC's Rockaway Peninsula with Midtown Manhattan in the background. Photo: Artie Raslich/Getty Images Image 6 of 8 A humpback whale shows its fluke off Rockaway Beach with One World Trade Center in the background. A humpback whale shows its fluke off Rockaway Beach with One World Trade Center in the background. Photo: Artie Raslich/Getty Images Image 7 of 8 A humpback whale lunge feeds very close to a boat off Rockaway Peninsula with Rockaway Beach. A humpback whale lunge feeds very close to a boat off Rockaway Peninsula with Rockaway Beach. Photo: Artie Raslich/Getty Images Image 8 of 8 Large numbers of humpback whales have returned to NYC for the first time in a century 1 / 8 Back to Gallery

The sight of a humpback whale fluke set against the New York City skyline is an anomaly no longer.

For the first time in 100 years, sizable numbers of humpback whales are being spotted in the waters off NYC, and it's thanks to years of environmental clean-up efforts, Popular Science reports.

"Because of the improvement of the water quality, algae and zooplankton have multiplied, giving good food for the menhaden [a small fish eaten by whales], which have returned in numbers that the fishermen say they have not seen in their lifetimes," Gotham Whales founder Paul L. Sieswerda told Pop Sci.

Until the enactment of the Clean Water Act in 1977, New York City's waters were a dumping ground for everything from medical waste to factory run-off. Some of those chemicals were cancer-causing, the EPA said.

New Yorkers have seen a significant rise in whale sightings over the past few years, and the trend is only accelerating in 2017. The whales are thought to be ducking into New York for a bit of sightseeing and feeding on their migration routes up and down the coast. Back in November, a whale was seen near the Statue of Liberty, prompting the Coast Guard to send out warnings to nearby boaters.

The whale sightings are so frequent, there are multiple ferry companies offering whale-watching tours.

On a recent American Princess Cruises excursion, lucky whale-watchers saw four humpbacks in a single trip. In 2016, the Telegraph reported that 20 whales were seen all year.

A similar trend, also credited to conservation efforts, has been seen with the shark population in California. The Clean Water Act and the Marine Life Protection Act have boosted the numbers of great white sharks — and marine mammals in general — according to scientists.

emptywinebottlez on June 9th, 2017 at 17:19 UTC »

It is apparently in thanks to years of environmental clean-up efforts.

"Because of an improvement of the water quality, Algae and zooplankton have multiplied, giving good food for the menhaden [a small fish eaten by whales], which have returned in numbers that the fishermen say they have not seen in their lifetimes," Gotham Whales founder Paul L. Sieswerda told Popular Science.

Good stuff!

HaileSelassieII on June 9th, 2017 at 15:58 UTC »

I do a lot of fishing in the Tri-State area and in recent years I've noticed a huge increase in wildlife, my pops' hypothesis is that all of the spraying they did for mosquitos back in the seventies really decimated all the small insects and smaller prey animals which worked its way up the foodchain, and now we're seeing it rebound.

Just the other morning I saw a Bald Eagle, some ducks, geese, a large muskrat and a few owls, just a few miles outside of one Americas largest metropolitan areas, behind a shopping center lol 15 years ago the place was almost literally a trash dump

Blizz360 on June 9th, 2017 at 15:42 UTC »

Anyone else searching through comments trying to find someone with some insight on this?

EDIT: For those who want to read more on this topic there are some great responses in this thread. Here a just a few. (Sorry for formatting, on mobile).

u/micromonas u/Inquisitr u/Ffdmatt