Tuesday, July 15, 2025
HomeArtArt exhibit underscores need for action to save orca

Art exhibit underscores need for action to save orca

Will you chip in to support our nonproft newsroom with a donation today?

Yes, I want want to support My Edmonds News!

An art exhibit in Seattle is highlighting the dire situation for orca off the coast of Washington.

The show, called SUPER POD: All Together features all the members of the endangered Southern Resident orca pods.

Gabriel Newton, the artist behind the project, painted the whales in acrylic on 45 pieces of wood found on the shores of the Salish Sea, where the whales travel and feed. He said the whales are struggling to hold on.

“It was inspired by wanting to raise awareness around the plight that they’re in and the lack of food that they’re experiencing,” Newton said. “And to motivate people to take action to help the orcas recover.”

There were 74 members of the Southern Residents left when Newton started the project, but a recent population analysis found there are only 72 left. Newton argued removing dams on the lower Snake River would allow more chinook salmon, which are the whales’ main food source, to travel to the Pacific Ocean. The exhibit opens at the A/NT Gallery at Seattle Center, 305 Harrison St., Aug. 1.

Deborah Giles, science and research director for the nonprofit Wild Orca, said the lack of prey is the biggest issue for the Southern Resident orcas. She stressed drastic action is needed to save them, including curtailing fishing to ensure they have enough food.

“These whales are not recovering, and they’re not recovering because we’re not taking serious-enough action with regard to fisheries management,” Giles said. “That’s the bottom line.”

Newton added it is critical to save the killer whales and salmon, not just for them but for us as well.

“Anytime a thread in the web of life is broken our own capacity to thrive is reduced,” Newton said. “I view orcas and salmon as both very integral threads.”

— By Eric Tegethoff, Public News Service

Thanks for being a committed reader and getting to the end of story. To help us tell many more stories in our community, please donate to our newsroom today!

Yes, I want to support My Edmonds News!

Related Articles

1 COMMENT

  1. Yes… this is so important. How can we lose our iconic mammal in Puget Sound? Fishery management needs reform and reducing demand at the consumer level can give that idea some muscle. We need to send a message by not eating salmon at restaurants in the area and not cooking it at home. We need to make sure that we save the Chinook for the Orcas. Also boaters can slow down to reduce noise levels. And we can support habitat restoration for the salmon too which includes removing the smaller dams. It is up to us to make sure our orca survive. We need to treat them as our friends and do all that we can to help them.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Upcoming Events