Killer Whales
Killer Whale (Orca) Management in Alaska
Several of the following are PDF files which require free Adobe Acrobat Reader software to view, navigate and print. Adobe also offers free tools for the visually disabled.AT1 Stock Status
![killer whales](killerwhales_jan_haaga_md.jpg)
Killer whales. Photo: Jan Haaga, NOAA Fisheries
- Petition and Actions to Designate AT1 Group as Depleted
- 69 FR 31321, June 3, 2004. Final rule to designate the AT1 group of transient killer whales as a depleted stock of marine mammals. Effective July 6, 2004.
- Stock Assessment Reports
Research
- Predation by Killer Whales in Cook Inlet and Western Alaska: An Integrated Approach 2008-2009 Project R0303-01 Final Report, Revised April 2011
- Killer whales as predators in the Gulf of Alaska, Aleutian Islands and Bering Sea, 2007
- Killer Whale Predation on Belugas in Cook Inlet, Alaska: Implications for a Depleted Population, Marine Mammal Science, 19(3):529–544, July 2003
- Quantifying the effects of prey abundance on killer whale reproduction, Ward et al., Journal of Applied Ecology, 2009
- Effects of age, sex and reproductive status on persistent organic pollutantconcentrations in "Southern Resident" killer whales, Krahn et al., Marine Pollution Bulletin, 2009
- News Release: Scientists studying offshore killer whales, September 2008
- Documentation of Sea Otters and Birds as Prey for Killer Whales, Marine Mammal Science, 22(1): 201–205, January 2006
- Killer Whale Surveys in Western Alaska, June/July 2005
- Surveying Killer Whale Abundance and Distribution, 2001-2003
- Killer Whale Research in SE Alaska, 1998
![killer whales](orcas_md_vanatten.jpg)
Killer whales. Photo: Amy Martins, NOAA Fisheries