The loneliest whale in the world

“Alice isn’t like any other baleen whale. Unlike all whales, Alice doesn’t have friends. She doesn’t have a family. She doesn’t belong to any tribe, pack or gang. She doesn’t have a lover. She never had one.

In the immense solitude of the ocean, Alice is completely alone.

The only thing Alice does is sing. Like other whales, she has been singing for a very long time. The first time we heard her song was in 1989, when the hydrophone network of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration recorded her voice for the first time. The researchers at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution have been tracking her using these hydrophones for the last two decades.

Listen here

Her songs—in this recording accelerated by a factor of five—come in groups of two to six calls, lasting for five to six seconds each. But her voice is unlike any other baleen whale. It is unique—while the rest of her kind communicate between 12 and 25Hz, Alice sings at 51.75Hz.

You see, my dear humans, that’s precisely Alice’s problem. No other whales can hear her. Every one of her desperate calls to communicate remains unanswered. Each cry ignored. And with every lonely song, Alice becomes sadder and more frustrated, her notes going deeper in despair as the years go by.”

(Source: Gizmodo)

1 comment
  1. Joseph Roberts said:

    down/convert those recordings@51.75 Hz. to 12-25 Hz.
    put a gps transponder on her,you can locate her.
    then use a submersible ucav drone equipped with audio recordings –
    follow/shadow her with ucav and play recordings.
    would be better if ucav could record her 51hz,down/convert and play it back in near to
    real-time, say 15-50ms latency.

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