Climate change is causing rapid Arctic ice melting, which disrupts the food chain at the seafloor where gray whales feed, leading to malnourishment and increased mortality events along the West Coast; this same warming has also enabled gray whales to migrate across the ice-free Arctic and potentially colonize the U.S. East Coast for the first time in hundreds of years.
Deep Dive
Prerequisite Knowledge
- No data available.
Where to go next
- No data available.
Deep Dive
Concerns grow over more gray whale deaths in Bay Area and climate change's contributionAdded:
We've been tracking the movements, and unfortunately, the deaths of gray whales in and around San Francisco Bay. For researchers, those events are part of an effort to better understand changes in the marine environment, sometimes thousands of miles away from the bay.
And as Spencer Christian reports, climate change could be a driving factor.
A sudden surging gray whale sightings and gray whale deaths is throwing a spotlight on San Francisco Bay. But piecing together the possible causes requires environmental detective work on a global scale. Matthew Savoca is a researcher at Stanford's Hopkins Marine Station on Monterey Bay, who's studied food chain threats facing other whale species, and he says unraveling the forces affecting the grays is tricky.
It's a complex story, but ultimately, it comes down to one point, and that's climate change. The actual way by which climate change is affecting gray whales is complex and only partially understood. But we know it is the effects of climate change in the Arctic that's affecting these gray whales here off our coast. First, it helps to understand that we're just one stop on the longest migrations of any whale species, essentially from the Arctic to Mexico and back. And like any vacation road trip, you want to load up on fuel first. But researchers believe melting ice sheets in the Arctic could be disrupting the normal food chain down to the seafloor, where grays typically feed. If that's the case, and that's just a theory, that's just a hypothesis.
But if that's the case, then even though there might be more places in the Arctic that gray whales can forage, perhaps those places are not as good to forage as we initially thought they might be.
And dating back to 2019, ABC7 Eyewitness News began tracking a massive die-off of grays along the West Coast, known as an unusual mortality event, or UME. At the time, many of the animals were malnourished to the point of starvation.
And while the UME was declared over several years ago, might this be another bad omen? John Carlo Ruyley of the Marine Mammal Center says once again, it's complicated.
>> In the years since the closure of the mortality event, it's been quite a mixed bag in terms of what we have seen locally here in San Francisco Bay. For example, in 2024, there were only six gray whales that accessed the bay the entirety of that season.
>> But last year, the number of grays entering the bay jumped again to 36 individual sightings with 21 dead animals discovered either in or around our coastline. And Ruyley says researchers are working to piece together clues from Alaska to Baja. One recent study looked not only at the number of grays visiting the bay, but their behavior. Big picture, some are in the bay for a few days and then may exit the bay and continue their northern migration. But we are seeing gray whales on a whole staying longer, sometimes months, in the bay during this late winter, early spring time period. Still, one thing is clear. Temperatures in the Arctic are facing some of the fastest warming on the planet. And Stanford's Matthew Savoca says the melting ice may even be linked to the historic reappearance of gray whales on the East Coast of the US for the first time in hundreds of years. There is an ice-free Arctic in the summer now for the most part, and so the gray whales can actually transit across the Arctic and come down the eastern seaboard. It remains to be seen if they're going to recolonize the eastern seaboard or not.
It all adds up to historic changes to a remote habitat and potentially a historic challenge to researchers tracking the health of a magnificent species that migrates along our coastline. In San Francisco, Spencer Christian, ABC 7 Eyewitness News.
Related Videos
Taking $10,000 Cash To Green the Driest Barrio in Bolivia
LeafofLifeEarth
528 views•2026-05-29
They Laughed When She Let the Weeds Grow Between the Fences — Then Her Cattle Outweighed Every Herd
BackroadHarvest
117 views•2026-05-28
Mozambique RELEASES AFRICA'S MOST DANGEROUS ANIMAL - After 2 Months, The Results Shock Scientists
SimpleDiscovery24
541 views•2026-05-29
The Bay Poisoned by Mercury #shorts
harmedino
289 views•2026-06-01
Calgary Flood Watch Day 4 🚨 Bow River Not Expected to Peak Until Tomorrow
RealtorDhirYYC
103 views•2026-06-01
Cute Seals Spotted On Remote UK Island | Our Tiny Islands
Channel4OnTour
141 views•2026-05-29
This Jamaican Pond Has A Deadly Reputation
MyEyesAreYours-i3s
656 views•2026-05-28
Glowing Blue Powder Turned Brazilian City Into Radioactive Wasteland
Adnan-Sandhu976
637 views•2026-05-31











