Melville wondered if the whale as a species could long endure "so remorseless a havoc" as the 19th century whaling fleets were inflicting. It turns out, though, the Yankee whalers were amateurs. The killings of that century were nothing compared to what giant, motorized whaling fleets, including the Japanese and Scandinavians but most especially the Soviets, would do in the 20th century. From 1947-1972, in Antarctic seas alone, Russian fleets killed over 63,000 sperm whales. The species, amazingly, survived even this kind of "havoc" and is the most numerous of the great whales, the major baleen species all having been decimated before a 1986 moratorium.
The sperm whale remains one of Nature's giants, with records from 68 to 84 feet accepted by various authorities. It is also a species about which we still have many questions. We don't even have a universally accepted figure on how many of these deep-diving squid-hunters exist. We don't know why they strand on the shore. We know they communicate, but we don't know how detailed their "talk" is, or what they are saying. Maybe for now we'll just settle for awe and wonder.
The Great Sperm Whale, in life and death
(Top: NOAA. Bottom: out of copyright)
(Top: NOAA. Bottom: out of copyright)
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