Whale Falls
Where do whales go when they die?
Most dead whales sink slowly to the ocean floor, until they rest
in the deep, 3000 feet or more. But
that’s not the end of the story – keep reading to learn about whale
resurrection and Blue Theology……
Sometimes we see (and smell!) dead whales decomposing on the
beach or in near shore waters. But those
are very few of the many thousands of whales who die naturally every year. (If we lived in Norway or Japan or Iceland we
might see the carcasses of the 2000 whales they still slaughter annually in
commercial hunts.)
Those lucky enough to die naturally become what’s called “whale
fall.”
Because it’s so cold in the deep, with lots of pressure, the
whales decompose very slowly. Scavengers like hagfish and crabs show up first,
and eat all their soft tissue in a few months.
Then furry worms and shrimp, called “enrichment opportunists,” move in
and colonize the massive whale bones for two or more years. Finally, the bacteria arrive and live for
many decades, 50 years or more, off the bones’ lipids, feeding in turn many
nearby mussels and clams.
Researchers using a remotely operated vehicle studied one 40-ton
grey whale carcass deep off the coast of Santa Barbara for over ten years and
found more than 30,000 animals, representing 200 different species, living off
the one animal. A dead whale can be one
of the most species-rich habitats in the ocean.
“There is no greater love than
this, to lay down one’s life for one’s friends.”
OK,
this is a slightly morbid topic for my weekly post on ocean spirituality. I’m pretty sure those are eels in this
picture, feasting on the dead whale. I
learned about whale falls as part of my volunteer guide training at the
Monterey Bay Aquarium. I guess I already
knew that every animal body eventually ends up in the sea in some diffuse form,
thanks to decomposition, gravity, run off and continental shift, but this
picture at first made me a little sad.
But I
am a resurrection girl. I do believe
that life is always more powerful than death.
Even for a 40-ton dead whale. In
their one death they give life to tens of thousands of others. In that miraculous balance of life and death
and new life, there is no waste, everything has value and meaning. Even in the darkest depths, a rich habitat.
They
are haunting, pictures of whale falls, courtesy of deep sea technology. I am moved, and strangely reassured, seeing
both the death hidden in the dark and the new life blooming from it. There is so much we know, and so much we have
no idea about at all. I like learning
new things. And I like letting the
mystery be, down deep.
Where do whales go when they die? To whale heaven of course. From deep dark wet, they are transformed into
new life. Same as for all of us living
beings. We move from deep dark wet to
light and life, again and again.
_____________
Very
much alive grey whales are having their babies in Baja Mexico this month, and
then will swim north to Alaska in a few months – visit our Blue Theology
Mission Station on Monterey Bay for a day or a week, youth group or adult
pilgrimage, to see whales swim by close to shore, and experience ocean
spirituality and stewardship.
Bluetheology.com. You can read
these Wednesday posts also at Blue Theology Mission Station on Facebook.
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