DSF Ollie the orca
Trackable Options |
Found this item? Log in. |
Printable information sheet to attach to DSF Ollie the orca
Print Info Sheet |
There is 1 user watching this listing. |
-
Owner:
-
DavidSuzukiFdn
Message this owner
-
Released:
-
Wednesday, April 19, 2017
-
Origin:
-
British Columbia, Canada
-
Recently Spotted:
-
Unknown Location
The owner hasn't set their collectible preference.
Use TB638VT to reference this item.
First time logging a Trackable? Click here.
Help Ollie get closer to Steveston, Richmond, BC
- Share Ollie's adventure on social media using our hashtag, #DSFgeocache, and be entered to win an Ocean Keepers t-shirt!
- Become an Ocean Keeper to learn more about what you and David Suzuki Foundation can do for the ocean
There are three distinct types of killer whale (also called Orcas) that inhabit Canada's Pacific North Coast: the salmon eating 'residents' , the shark liver eating 'offshores', and the marine mammal eating 'transients' (Now named Bigg's whales). Both are top of their respective complex food webs. The narrow passage that separates Vancouver Island from the rest of Canada is one of the best places in the world to observe one of two distinct populations of resident killer whales. Salmon returning to the streams and rivers of their birth are funneled through narrow channels, making a fantastic hunting ground for killer whales. The transients/Bigg's whales are known to eat pretty much any warm-blooded mammal along the Pacific Coast, including harbour seals, porpoises, dolphins, minke whales, humpback whales, Stellar sea lions, grey whales and sea otters.
Orcas are very vocal and they use calls and whistles to communicate with each other underwater. Each resident (transients and offshores also) orca family has a distinct dialect that they use to communicate within their family while swimming, feeding and foraging. Some parts of the dialect are unique to the family and some are shared with other pods. Shared calls indicate that different pods may have descended from a common ancestral group. Just like humans, orcas make slight changes to their calls depending on their emotional state, location and identity.
Gallery Images related to DSF Ollie the orca
View 1 Gallery Image
Tracking History (14965.9mi) View Map
darthmalik discovered it
|
North West England, United Kingdom
|
Visit Log
|
Left alone while dropping another TB.
|
Reddevil1976 placed it in Drive by TB hotel
|
North West England, United Kingdom
- 59.87 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
Reddevil1976 took it to Go With The (Ductile) Flow
|
North Wales, United Kingdom
- 4.03 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
Reddevil1976 took it to Pier Pressure #25 - Colwyn Bay 2021
|
North Wales, United Kingdom
- 5.01 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
Reddevil1976 took it to It's 'TGGOOT'!
|
North Wales, United Kingdom
- 4.05 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
Reddevil1976 took it to Viewfinder - Rhos on Sea
|
North Wales, United Kingdom
- .69 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
Reddevil1976 took it to Woodland Trail - The End
|
North Wales, United Kingdom
- .13 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
Reddevil1976 took it to Woodland Trail - The Big One
|
North Wales, United Kingdom
- .11 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
Reddevil1976 took it to Bryn Euryn - The Other Side
|
North Wales, United Kingdom
- .12 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
Reddevil1976 took it to Woodland Trail - Rest 'n' Cache
|
North Wales, United Kingdom
- .14 miles
|
Visit Log
|
|
data on this page is cached for 3 mins
|