How did the End of the Dinosaurs Affect Marine Life?

How did the end of dinosaurs affect marine life? Explained by Ocean Generation.

A lot of people know about the meteorite that killed the dinosaurs, but how were marine creatures affected by this event? 

66 million years ago, the age of the dinosaurs came to an end, becoming the known as the K-Pg (the geological abbreviation for Cretaceous-Palaeogene) Mass Extinction. A meteorite impact sent the world into darkness, leading to the downfall of the once dominant dinosaurs and many other creatures. Despite the fame of this event, little thought is given to the effects on the past Ocean.

How did the dinosaurs become extinct

The famous driver for the extinction of the dinosaurs was, of course, the meteorite that struck the Chicxulub Impact Site in Mexico. But this wasn’t the only cause for extinction. The volcanoes of the Deccan Traps in India were violently erupting too, spewing massive amounts of lava. Together, these two events were the drivers for the mass extinction. However, the meteorite and eruptions themselves didn’t directly cause the extinction, instead it was their aftermath. So, what happened?

The world – 66 million years in the past 

Due to plate tectonics, the world looked slightly different 66 million years ago (Ma) compared to now. Despite the similarities, the world, and so the shape of the Ocean, were different. Firstly, there were more connections between Oceanic bodies, for example from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Next, the Atlantic was much younger and much narrower. Lastly, as there were no ice caps and the climate was warmer, sea level was higher by about 200m.

What is plate tectonics?
The Earth is made up of multiple large sections called “plates”. Plate tectonics is the idea that these plates move around and past each other very slowly. This means that over many millions of years, they can move into completely different arrangements and positions. 

What did Ocean life look like before the extinction

The life found in this Ocean of the past was quite different to the present, but we do see some familiar faces. Sharks, crocodiles and fish still existed, while algal ecosystems (the photosynthesisers of the Ocean) supported the food chain. These weren’t the only things found in the marine world of the Cretaceous period, though.

Cephalopods, which are the group containing modern octopuses and squids, had multiple representatives. Ammonites had been abundant before the extinction, although were on a gradual decline in diversity towards the extinction. These animals had a spiralled shell shape a little like their living cousins, the nautiluses, and lived throughout the Ocean. Alongside them, the nautiluses were also present but made it through the extinction.

Of course, there were also the famous predatory marine reptiles of the time, commonly (incorrectly) included when referring to dinosaurs.

The relatives, the long-necked plesiosaur and the short-necked pliosaur, were two notable groups, the former having a nearly complete fossil discovered by Mary Anning. However, pliosaurs didn’t die in the K-Pg extinction, instead going extinct over 20 million years before (still considered the “late Cretaceous period”, the geological periods are long!).

Instead, the dominant predator at the K-Pg was the mosasaur, which were predatory marine reptiles, like the pliosaur. The difference was that the mosasaurs were better suited to live in the Ocean, as they could adapt better to changes in conditions, becoming more successful and thriving until the extinction.

Mosasaurs and plesiosaurs went extinct. Explained by Ocean Generation

What happened to Ocean life during the Extinction

As per the name “K-Pg Mass Extinction”, a lot of species went extinct. It’s estimated that around 76% of all species died, being about the same for marine species, from the results of the meteorite and volcanism.

The meteorite and volcanoes weren’t the direct causes; the impact and the lava were nowhere near global scales. Instead, secondary factors caused by the impact and eruptions led to the extinction. The main effect of each was their effect on the food chain, with the death of algae.

The death of algae was a main cause of the marine extinction 

When the meteorite hit the Earth, it sent high amounts of dust and debris into the atmosphere, leading to a sort of “curtain”. This curtain of dust blocked out the Sun for a considerable time, leading to an “impact winter” (a period of extreme cold, due to the meteorite blocking the Sun), and darkness. This period of darkness decreased both plant and algae numbers, with both requiring the Sun for energy.

Just as plants are the bottom of the food chain (what we call “primary producers”) on land, algae are the primary producers in the Ocean. The decrease in numbers means that the animals that eat algae would have less food and die, meaning the animals that eat those animals would have less food and die. This knock-on effect up the food chain is one of the main causes of the mass extinction, both on land and in the Ocean.

What happened during the K-Pg extinction? Explained by Ocean Generation.

The volcanoes of the Deccan Traps, along with releasing vast amounts of lava, released considerable amounts of volcanic gases too, notably carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide. Carbon dioxide, along with being the infamous greenhouse gas, can lead to Ocean acidification and carbon dioxide poisoning. Sulfur dioxide is a potent ingredient in acid rain, also contributing to Ocean acidification.

The reason this is so important is that some algae are dependent on the Ocean being a certain acidity to live. This fast, significant change in acidity led to the death of these algae, having an impact on the marine food chain.

What happened to Ocean life after the extinction

If all of this happened, why did anything survive at all? A key player in the extinction of animals was starvation. The longer an animal could survive without food, or the more accessible food that an animal had, the more likely it would be to survive.

Mammals and fish: the survivors of the extinction 

This applies to both land and the Ocean. Mammals were able to outlive the dinosaurs as they could live off of insects and dead plant matter, paving the way for their domination.

In the Ocean, the major surviving group was the “ray-finned fish”, which make up the vast majority of fish species today. They were able to survive due to some algae thriving shortly after the extinction, leading to the success of these fish.

What happened with marine predators? 

For the predators, replacement with fish also occurred. The mosasaurs and plesiosaurs that lived in the Cretaceous period had disappeared, with sharks surviving into the modern day.

The advantage that sharks had on the marine reptiles isn’t well researched, but it could have been to do with the reptiles being warm blooded, hence needing more food than the cold-blooded sharks.

Sharks, crocodiles and fish existed before the K-Pg extinction. Posted by Ocean Generation, leaders in Ocean education.

How did algae survive? 

Some algae also had the adaptations required to survive the extinction, with some having an inactive state that they can go into when water conditions aren’t ideal. This means they could live through the cold and lack of light from the impact winter.

Also, reproduction methods likely influenced their survival, as some algae could reproduce by themselves, but others required a partner to reproduce. During times of reduced population numbers, like the extinction, it is more efficient to not require a partner.

Different survival strategies of young cephalopods 

Finally, between the ammonites and the nautiluses, they have different survival methods when young. The young nautiluses are birthed in eggs with a yolk to feed from, but young ammonites were thought to have had eaten algae, rather than having a ready food source. Reduced algae decreased the young ammonites’ survival.

Ammonite fossil and nautilus. Posted by Ocean Generation.

How do we know what happened during the extinction? 

There is uncertainty about details of the past, because we are 66 million years in the future of the event. This means we must take logical guesses at what happened because we can’t observe events directly. To do this, we look at the rocks and fossils from the past, called the geological and fossil records.

A useful inference we can make is that if a fossil appears in rocks of a certain age, but not in younger rocks, it is likely that the animal has gone extinct. We have applied this to many of the organisms of the K-Pg extinction, like the dinosaurs, which tells us around when they went extinct.

This method is not foolproof though, as this assumption is susceptible to misinterpretations and mistakes. For example, there was a group of fish called the coelacanths that were thought to have gone extinct during the K-Pg, as it hadn’t appeared in the geological record since. However, modern relatives were later found, leading to the realisation that they hadn’t gone extinct, but just happened to not preserve as fossils after the K-Pg extinction.

Why does this matter

It may seem like studying the past life is just for fun, and while it’s fun, it’s also useful. Understanding the mechanisms and effects of past mass extinctions, especially for the Ocean, can help us prevent a human-made one. Lots of the present-day organisms affected by modern extinction, like whales and corals, live in the Ocean.

Many species could and have disappeared due to human activity, with the current rate of extinction being at least 50 times higher than the background rate (i.e. the rate without human influence). By studying the past, we can understand the effects of our actions and possibly prevent another mass extinction.

The other side of this is that the Ocean is largely unexplored in space, but also in time. Exploring past life can tell us what has once lived on our planet and the environments that they lived in telling us more about our Ocean and Earth.

The current rate of extinction is higher than the rate without human activity.

Secret life of algae: From oxygen to algae blooms

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Fact file: Fun facts about orca (killer whales)

Orca fact file, posted by Ocean Generation.

Orca (also known as killer whales) are famous residents of the Ocean. They are fast, fashionable and family-oriented. Frankly, they are fantastic.  

What are orca? 

Orca aren’t whales 

The commonly used name, killer whales, can cause confusion. Early sailors became familiar with orca hunting the great whales, naming them “whale killers”. Somewhere in history, that got flipped to become “killer whale”, even though orca are actually dolphins. They are the biggest of the dolphins.

Orca are whales 

But the whole dolphin family, the Delphinoidea, belong to the toothed whales – the Odontoceti. Along with the Mysticeti, the baleen whales, they make up the cetaceans. So, you could argue all dolphins (and therefore the orcas) are in fact whales.  

Orcinus orca is currently a single species, although scientists have suggested dividing it into races, sub species or even different species.  

Different groups of orcas are known as ecotypes which inhabit different parts of the Ocean and show physical and cultural differences. They speak different dialects, eat different food and grow to different sizes with different colouration. In many ways they are much like humans.  

Order cetaceans explained by Ocean Generation.

Where do orca live?  

Populations can be found all over the world, typically preferring coastal seas to the open Ocean, and the higher latitudes closer to the poles. The main population centres for orca are in the Southern Ocean, the north-eastern Atlantic and in the northern Pacific, but orca can be found from Hawaii to the Arctic. 

How many orcas are there? 

There is an estimated global population of 50,000 orca, including 25,000 in the Southern Ocean, and 10,000 in the waters of Norway, Iceland and the Faroes.

The global population of orca has not been assessed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). We don’t know enough to say whether orca populations are increasing, decreasing or stable.  

We do know about the different orca sub populations around the world. Some, such as the Iberian orca population which has been sinking boats, are critically endangered. The West Coast Community of the UK is thought to only have two members remaining: Aquarius and John Coe, who at over 60 years old may well be the oldest male killer whale in the world.  

Other orca populations are doing better. Antarctic populations are hard to study, but thought to be stable. Northern Resident orca of the west coast of North America are listed as threatened, but their numbers are increasing by an average of 2% per year after protective measures were introduced for them and their main prey – harbour seals.  

Where do orca live: explained by Ocean Generation.
Image by NOAA

What do orca eat? 

All orca are carnivores but different populations of orca have different preferred diets. Norwegian orca have specialised in herring, northeast Pacific orca hunt salmon and New Zealand orca focus on elasmobranch species such as eagle rays, stingrays and shark species.  

Two orca brothers in South African waters, Port and Starboard, are infamous for targeting great white sharks, flipping them onto their backs into a trance-like state known as tonic immobility and eating their livers. As a result, great whites leave the area when orcas are about. Other orcas have been recording other shark species such as whale sharks, seven gill sharks, mako sharks and white sharks

Nothing is off the menu. Orca will hunt marine mammals, including walrus, dolphins, narwhals, beluga and whales. Orca have been recorded recently hunting the largest animal that has even lived: blue whales.  

Being out of the water doesn’t always help. A population in Patagonia will beach themselves to catch the young sea lions learning to swim in the shallows. A population in Antarctica has perfected a technique of swimming together to create waves to break up ice and wash any seals taking refuge on it into the water.

Their most surprising prey? Orca are one of the main predators of moose, who swim between islands and even dive down to eat aquatic foliage.  

Nothing is off the menu, apart from humans – no human has ever been killed by a wild orca.  

Orcas are also known as killer whales. Posted by Ocean Generation, leaders in Ocean literacy

Killer Facts about Orcas 

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Who are the orca outlaws sinking boats, and why are they?

Why are orca sinking boats? Explained by Ocean Generation.

Why are orca sinking boats? 

Revenge, anti-capitalist revolution, competition, territoriality, a ‘tide-pod’ challenge-esque fad, curiosity – all suggestions to answer one question: why are orca sinking boats?

Much changed in the world in 2020. We all stayed home, made banana bread and, in the UK, attended Joe Wicks workout classes. There was a change in the Ocean in 2020 too: orca began bumping boats.

Now, almost six years on, 8 boats have sunk and over 250 have been damaged. Looking at the data from these interactions, and through knowing these orca, can we piece together why they might have started down this road of vessel vandalism?

What are orca

Orca (Orcinus orca) are the apex marine predator. They are found throughout the Ocean, from Antarctica to Norway, Argentina to New Zealand to South Africa.

Orca are highly social and highly intelligent, living in large family groups usually led by a matriarch – an older female. They are capable of advanced communication and coordination, executing intricate, risky and ingenious hunting strategies. Orca are incredible.

They have been recorded hunting whale sharks, white sharks, walrus, and whales (hence their nickname, killer whales). Scientists don’t believe they are particularly affronted by species beginning with W.

When orca hunt, they can create waves to wash seals off ice (or smash the ice they are on) and intentionally strand themselves on beaches to catch sea lions in the shallows. Orca also upend white sharks to paralyse them in tonic immobility (a trance-like paralysis some sharks enter when upside down).

Orcas live in close-knit family groups. Explained by Ocean Generation.

Who are the orca that sink boats

The Iberian orcas are a small population of orca that reside in the western Atlantic from Gibraltar up to the Bay of Biscay. The ‘small’ is a double entendre. They are among the smallest orca on the planet, with females reaching up to a mere 5.8m and males only 6.5m. They are also small in number: the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) classify this population as critically endangered, with the population estimated to number only up to 50.

Between 1999 and 2011, 47 individuals from 5 different pods were photo-identified and a further 16 in the Canary Islands, which are genetically distinct (they aren’t family) from the Iberian orca. After accounting for deaths, the Iberian population was 33 in 2012.

In 2023, the number had grown to a relatively stable 37.

Of this orca population, 15 individuals have been identified as boat-bumpers from witness accounts, photos and videos. These sailing saboteurs are then given the moniker “Gladis” – derived from gladiator, or fighter.

The Gladises are in two main pods, each led by an older matriarch. Gladis Lamari is estimated to have been born in 1992 and Gladis Herbille in 1993. Neither of them have directly interacted with boats: they are Gladises as they have been observed close by during boat interactions. They seem content to sit back and watch the younger ones.

What do the Iberian orca eat? 

From April to June, the Iberian orcas gather in the shallower waters of the Gulf of Cadiz and the northwestern strait of Gibraltar. Why? Because it is the start of the spawning migration into the Mediterranean of their primary food source: Atlantic bluefin tuna.

In July the orcas shift to the central Strait of Gibraltar as the tuna begin to return to the Atlantic and follow them up the coast of Portugal into September and October.

Iberian orcas feed on Atlantic bluefin tuna. Explained by Ocean Generation.

How do we know the orcas are eating tuna?  

By using crossbows, mass spectrometers and following the principle “you are what you eat”. A skin sample was collected from biopsy darts, fired from a modernised version of the ancient weapon. To reiterate: a marine biologist, armed with a crossbow, gets a bit of skin and can work out what the orca are eating.

To assess the diet, the orca skin is analysed for the ratios of carbon and nitrogen isotopes.

Isotopes are atoms of the same element with different masses, due to different numbers of neutrons.

Carbon isotopes indicate where an animal feeds, while nitrogen indicates the trophic level (higher trophic level means higher up the food chain – a predator that eats predators, like orca, have a high trophic level).

In short, the fish an animal eats leave different ‘signatures’ that we can read, telling us what and where our orca are eating.

The Iberian orca showed carbon and nitrogen values reflecting a diet of Atlantic bluefin tuna, with one exception. The female (named Vega) had higher ratios of heavier carbon, showing she was eating more coastal fish species – everyone has their preferences.

Have orca previously sunk boats

The history between the Iberian orca and humans is a long one. The great Roman author Pliny the Elder reported the presence of orca in AD77. The catch of local fishers was said to increase when the orca were around, and even that fishers would wait for the killer whales to herd the tuna towards shore to help them.

More recently, the tables have turned. Now it is the orca using the fishers for an easier meal, taking tuna caught on fishing lines as they are hauled in. Unfortunately, this is a dangerous strategy, and orca have been seen with deep wounds and amputations, likely from interacting with fisheries.

But before 2020, we have very few instances of orca sinking boats.

In 1820, a whaling vessel, the Essex, was sunk by a sperm whale in the Pacific. In the aftermath, the crew reported orca attempting to sink one of the small boats they had escaped the Essex in.

There were two boat sinkings in the 1970s attributed to orca: in 1972 a 43 ft sailing boat in the Pacific, near the Galapagos, was sunk by a pod of orca. In 1976 another sunk off the coast of Brazil. A juvenile male orca, L98 or Luna, had a long running period of interacting with human things from 2001-2006.

Luna was separated from his pod when he was just 2 years old. He spent five years around Vancouver Island where he would interact with floatplanes and boats, causing damage to the craft and occasionally hurting himself. Sadly, Luna was killed in March 2006 by a tugboat.

How many boats have orca sunk? 

Some social media posts have claimed over 1,000 boats, but as of March 2026, 8 vessels have been sunk.  

Where have orcas been sinking boats? Explained by Ocean Generation.
Map via Google Earth

It is important to underline, everyone sailing on these boats was rescued safely. There have been no injuries or deaths from the orcas, or aggression shown towards humans. 

How many boats have orcas interacted with

Using the last published data from November 2025, there have been 761 interactions between the Gladises (the nickname for orca seen around boats) and boats around the Iberian Peninsula.

The numbers recorded are from the Cruising Association, a sailing group that have encouraged reporting of incidents, which they verify in their network. These numbers are an underestimate, as not every interaction is reported, especially minor ones.

25 May 2020 – the first interaction between two unidentified orcas and a rigid-hulled inflatable boat in the Strait of Gibraltar, no damage recorded.

20 July 2020 – first recorded ‘disruptive’ interaction. Following 9 days saw five more incidents, all south of the cape of Trafalgar, just north of the strait of Gibraltar.

July–November 202052 interactions, 49 confirmed physical contact. 9 Gladises by the end of the year.

2021146 interactions, number of Gladises rises to 14.

2022138 interactions, 2 sinkings. Number of Gladises rises to 15.

2023186 interactions, 2 sinkings.

2024125 interactions. 2 sinkings.

2025 – 134 interactions up to 10 December. 2 sinkings.

How many boats have orcas interacted with? Explained by Ocean Generation

What boats are orcas bumping? 

The average length of vessel is 12m, or 39ft. Around 80% of the vessels involved are sailing boats. Of those sailing boats, most have a particular type of rudder– a spade rudder.

What are the theories for orca interacting with boats? 

Are orca out for revenge

A commonly given reason for why orca are sinking boats is that of revenge. The narrative is compelling: an orca, injured by a passing boat, calling her kin to arms to meet the threat of humanity. A response from a beleaguered and besieged marine world.

This theory has largely come about because of an orca named White Gladis.

Who is White Gladis (Blanca)? 

White Gladis, translates from her Spanish name, Gladis Blanca. Born in 2005, Blanca is the mother of Gladis Filabres, Gladis Dalila and Gladis Clara. She is herself the daughter of Gladis Lamari, who has been present during interactions but never actively touched a vessel.

As a reminder: Gladis is a simple designation given to any orca involved in nefarious nautical activity. It has its origins in an early name for orca – Orcinus gladiator, meaning whale fighter – and the term gladis means fighter.

The theory is that Blanca had the marks of a propeller and was teaching her kin to destroy the thing that hurt her.

Is White Gladis (Blanca) looking for revenge

Blanca was certainly one of the early proponents of this behaviour. The first interactions in July 2020 were Blanca, her half-sister Gladis Dalila and an orca from another pod, Gladis Negra.

Orca mothers and grandmothers are key figures in orca society – they are one of the few animals other than humans that are known to go through menopause in the wild, as the grandmothers act as a font of knowledge that they can pass on to the younger generations.

She also does have scars on her skin. But she is an old orca, from a pod known to interact with fishing boats.

Who is White Gladis, also known as Blanca?

Some of those markings are likely to be tooth raking marks, from other orcas running their teeth down her side in play or in mating. Others may be from fishing lines – these orca are known to steal tuna from fishermen, they could well end up with scars from hooks or lines getting tangled.

None of the marks are likely from a propeller – a sticking point for a theory that relies on a negative interaction with a boat.

Is she out for revenge? Orcas are capable of hunting the largest animal to have ever lived (the blue whale) and snacking on the liver of one of the most notorious Ocean predators (the great white shark). They are 5m muscular torpedoes that can develop sophisticated hunting strategies.

If these ‘wolves of the sea’ wanted to wreak havoc upon the sailing community, they could. Only 8 sinkings over 5 and a half years suggests that isn’t the intended outcome.

Are orcas feeling the pressure from humans

Related to the idea of revenge is the theory of competition between orca and humans. Tuna are the main food of this population and a prized fish for human consumption. Tuna stocks were crashed in the mid 2000s by overfishing, leading to zero Iberian orca calves surviving between 2006-2010.

Orca have been seen with fishing lines attached to them, and one individual in the population, Corsica, suffered a severed right flipper and a cut at the base of her dorsal fin. Corsica was not a Gladis, and although her daughters are given Gladis designation, they have only followed small boats, not sailing boats, and never damaged any. Corsica was sadly found dead in March 2022.

The Straits of Gibraltar is one of the busiest areas of Ocean for marine traffic and has high noise and chemical pollution levels.

The theory is that the ongoing pressures from noisy neighbours that are taking the orcas food is leading them to vent frustration on an easy target – sailing boats. Hard to prove, and the orca with the clearest motivation to do so (Corsica and her relatives) never showed this behaviour.

Are orca using boats as hunting practice

The behaviour of these orca – ramming and targeting the stern of the boats – is comparable to the hunting strategies they employ when targeting the blue-fin tuna this population eat.

Arguments have been made that the orcas are using sailing vessels as a hunting tool, a training target to show younger orca how to hunt. The incidents started with older females and were followed by younger individuals copying.

The leading theory for our ship shakers? That they want to play.  

As previously mentioned, part of the evidence for this is how few boats have sunk – it doesn’t seem to be the intended outcome.

The boats receiving orca attention are interesting. They are mostly sailing boats with spade rudders – these rudders turn completely, as opposed to overshot or hinge rudders, which have a ‘backbone’ of rudder that doesn’t. The boats getting bothered are those with the most mobile pieces on them. Sailing boats typically travel between 5 and 9 knots, a comfortable speed for an orca.

You have slow-moving vessels moving through the orcas home, and they all have a moving thing at the back – pretty enticing for some bored young orca.

The leading theory of why orcas sink boats is play.

The missing orca generation.  

The lack of calves between 2006 and 2010 could be in play in a different way here. There is a missing generation of orca: young orca are missing older calves to play with. As any bored child will start doing, they make up some games for themselves, using what is available (boats).

How do you avoid getting sunk by a pod of orca?

The best solution: don’t sail a spade-ruddered monohull sailing vessel around 12m long between Gibraltar and Galicia from July to October.

But seriously: guidance for sailors is unfortunately varied. Initial studies suggested that boats are slightly more likely to be damaged if they keep moving – if boats stop, the orca can lose interest and move off.

More recently, Portuguese authorities maintain that playing dead or reversing is the best way, while Spanish authorities advise motoring to more shallow water.

The International Whaling Commission held a workshop attended by orca experts from around the world. The guidance was to move at least 2-3km from the area of first encounter to an area where rescue, if needed, is easier.

The same workshop strongly recommended against using deterrents that could harm the orcas. Besides the fact this is a critically endangered population, none have been shown to succeed in stopping an interaction and they are likely more dangerous to the people deploying them.

Desperate sailors have used some extreme counter measures to protect their floating homes. Throwing firecrackers and seal bombs; pouring bleach, diesel or chlorine overboard; attaching knives or spikes to the rudder; throwing rocks or heavy chain; electrocution.

It is difficult to condemn sailors reaching for anything they have to hand when a six-tonne animal is apparently dismantling their boat from underneath them. But these measures range from ineffective to cruel, and present as much risk to the sailors as the orca, if not more.

Rather than bombs and chemicals, are there any other potential solutions

A few genuinely promising suggestions have been put forward. Modifying the design of the rudders to alter the flow of the water could make them less appealing to orcas in the first place. Dropping a barrier of weighted lines around the stern of the boat to prevent easy access to the rudders could give sailors some more peace of mind.

Orca have been shown to flee when they hear the calls of long-finned pilot whales. Sailors could either play pilot whale calls via underwater speakers, learn to mimic these calls or bribe local pilot whales for protection (we would love to see some pilot whale language classes).

Our changing relationship with orcas. Posted by Ocean Generation, leaders in Ocean education

Our changing relationship with orcas 

Whatever the reasons and whatever the solutions, the situation does give us a chance to appreciate the intelligence and power of one of the Ocean’s top residents.

Our relationship with the orcas of Iberia has been tumultuous. Pliny the Elder wrote about them in AD77, while the birth of Jesus was in living memory. Medieval fishers would welcome them as partners, watching for their dorsal fins to show the tuna were running. More recently, the relationship soured – in 2002, an orca, Burela, was found dead with bullet wounds.

Now it is more confused than ever. The waters are shared by sailors armed with firecrackers, dreading that a black fin will approach from behind, and by whale-watching boats filled with passengers with crossed fingers that they may see the exact same thing.

At the centre of it all, is curiosity. The same thing powering the whale-watching companies could be compelling the orcas. Revenge becomes something more ordinary and wonderful. Just as a younger sibling might poke a sandcastle on a beach and accidentally knock your tower down, the orca could be exploring and playing, with some unfortunate consequences.

Humans and orca have shared the Iberian waters for millennia. We have been wary strangers, reluctant neighbours, collaborative hunters and fierce rivals. How we react to this next chapter in our relationship with them will reflect on us more than it does on them.

Secret life of algae: From oxygen to algae blooms

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