These snapshots have historically been the limit in our ability to understand the intricacies of the daily lives and needs of whales, and has affected our ability to thoroughly address key conservation questions to appropriately advocate for effective protection measures.
Drones are expanding our capacity to investigate and comprehend whale behaviour through prolonged windows of observation, providing new perspectives and insights into behaviours we have observed for many years. As a drone in one of our first flights hovered overhead of a humpback whale, our team hovered around the screen that displayed in real time what the drone was observing.
What we saw was a whale engaged in what we now understand to be a “resting travel” behaviour state, whereby whales travel for an extended periods at relatively slow speeds just below the waters surface, remaining visible to observation through the drone but left completely vulnerable to a ship strike.

In partnership with the Gitga’at First Nation and WWF-Canada through the Ships, Whales, and Acoustics in Gitga’at Territory (SWAG) project, we designed and developed our drone focal follow study to further understand how whale behaviours relate to their ship strike vulnerabilities.
During drone focal follows, our drone pilots focus each flight on an individual or group of whales.
As the drone flies overhead, it collects high quality video paired directly with highly accurate GPS locations recorded every fraction of a second. This allows us to comprehensively pair fine-scale observations of whale behaviour with breath rates, swim speeds, precise habitat usage, and the proportion of time spent just below the surface—invisible to vessels and vulnerable to a ship strike—with the proportion of time spent visible above the surface and therefore potentially detectable by a vessel’s on-deck observer.
The information we can gather from drone focal follows is providing us with an incredible opportunity to better understand the risk of ship strikes to whales as they navigate their habitats along the BC coast and conduct the behaviours necessary to their survival.