North Atlantic Right Whale
North Atlantic Right Whale
Eubalaena glacialis
Protected Status
Quick Facts
A right whale breaches. Credit: NOAA Fisheries
A right whale breaches. Credit: NOAA Fisheries
What's New
About the Species
A right whale breaches. Credit: NOAA Fisheries
A right whale breaches. Credit: NOAA Fisheries
The North Atlantic right whale is one of the world’s most endangered large whale species.
Two other species of right whales exist: the North Pacific right whale, which is found in the North Pacific Ocean, and the Southern right whale, which is found in the southern hemisphere. Right whales are baleen whales, feeding on copepods (tiny crustaceans) by straining huge volumes of ocean water through their baleen plates, which act like a sieve.
By the early 1890s, commercial whalers had hunted North Atlantic right whales to the brink of extinction. (They got their name from being the "right" whales to hunt because they floated when they were killed.) Whaling is no longer a threat, but they have never recovered to pre-whaling numbers, and human interactions still present a danger to this species. Entanglement in fishing gear and vessel strikes are the leading causes of North Atlantic right whale mortality. Increasing ocean noise levels from human activities are also a concern because the noise may interfere with right whale communication and increase their stress levels.
NOAA Fisheries and our partners are dedicated to recovering the North Atlantic right whale population and minimizing conflict with human activities. We use innovative techniques to learn more about these endangered whales and what can be done to reduce threats. We engage our partners, including the fishing, boating, and shipping industries, as we develop and implement measures that foster healthy fisheries and thriving marine economies and support the species' recovery.
Read the North Atlantic Right Whale Scenario Planning Summary Report
Population Status
North Atlantic right whales have been listed as endangered under the Endangered Species Act since 1970. The most recent abundance estimate for the population is approximately 380 whales—an increase of approximately 20 individuals since 2020—and marks the third consecutive year that the population has shown signs of increasing. We still estimate there to be only about 70 reproductively active females. NOAA Fisheries is cautiously optimistic: the species abundance is increasing, and the sharp increase in mortalities over the last decade appears to have slowed. However, the species continues to experience human-caused mortalities and serious injuries.
There is an ongoing Unusual Mortality Event, which was declared in 2017, that includes sublethally injured or ill, seriously injured, and dead right whales. Research demonstrates that only about one-third of right whale deaths are detected.
Appearance
North Atlantic right whales have stocky black bodies with no dorsal fins, and their blow spouts are shaped like a “V.” Their tails are broad, deeply notched, and all black with a smooth trailing edge. Their bellies may be all black or have irregularly shaped white patches. Pectoral flippers are relatively short, broad, and paddle-shaped. Calves are about 14 feet at birth and adults can grow to lengths of 52 feet.
Their heads have knobby white patches of rough skin, called callosities, which appear white because of whale lice (cyamids) covering their otherwise black skin. Each right whale has a unique pattern of callosities that scientists use to identify individual whales, an invaluable tool in tracking population size and health. Aerial and ship-based surveys and the North Atlantic Right Whale Consortium’s photo-identification database maintained by our partners at the New England Aquarium help track individuals over the years.
Behavior and Diet
When viewing right whales on their feeding grounds in the Northeast United States and Canada, you might see these enormous creatures breaching and then crashing back down with a thunderous splash. You might also see them swimming along with their rostrum out of the water as they skim feed on dense patches of plankton. Right whales feed by opening their mouths while swimming slowly through large patches of copepods and other zooplankton. They filter out these tiny organisms from the water through their baleen, where the copepods become trapped in a tangle of hair-like material that acts like a sieve. Right whales feed anywhere from the water’s surface to the bottom of the water column.
Groups of right whales may be seen actively socializing at the water’s surface, known as surface-active groups, or SAGs. Mating and socializing occurs in SAGs, which are observed during all seasons and in all habitats.
Right whales also exhibit behaviors that make them hard to see. They tend to swim and rest just at or below the surface of the water with very little of their body showing. Environmental conditions like bad weather, poor sea state, murky water, and low light can further impact the ability to see right whales or recognize specific physical and behavioral characteristics.
In the southeastern United States, where right whales regularly give birth, new mothers use most of their energy on nursing and supporting their calves. They tend to exhibit more energy-conserving behaviors like resting and shallow breathing.
Right whales communicate using low-frequency moans, groans, and pulses, which may maintain contact between individuals, communicate threats, signal aggression, or be used for other social reasons.
Where They Live
North Atlantic right whales primarily occur in Atlantic coastal waters on the continental shelf, although they also are known to travel far offshore, over deep water.
Right whales migrate seasonally and may travel alone or in small groups. In the spring, summer, and into fall, many of these whales can be found in waters off New England and further north into Canadian waters, where they feed and mate. Acoustic data show that right whales are found in waters off New England and the Mid-Atlantic year-round.
Each fall, some right whales travel more than 1,000 miles from these feeding grounds to the shallow, coastal waters of their calving grounds off of North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida, though migration patterns vary.
NOAA Fisheries has designated two areas as critical habitat for North Atlantic right whales. These areas provide important feeding, nursery, and calving habitat:
- Off the coast of New England (foraging area)
- Off the southeast U.S. coast from Cape Fear, North Carolina, to below Cape Canaveral, Florida (calving area)
World map providing approximate representation of the North Atlantic right whale's range.
Lifespan & Reproduction
Right whales can probably live for at least 70 years, but data on their average lifespan is limited since scientific monitoring of the species is fairly recent. Ear wax can be used to estimate age in right whales after they have died. Another way to determine lifespan is to look at groups of closely related species. There are indications that some species closely related to right whales may live more than 100 years. However, female North Atlantic right whales are now only living to around 45 years old and males only to around 65 years old. Such reduced lifespans are due to human-caused mortality, not old age.
In recent years, researchers have recorded more deaths among adult females than adult males, leading to a population with more males than females. Females that undergo energetic stress from reproduction may be more susceptible than males to dying from chronic injuries such as those from entanglement or vessel strikes.
Female right whales become sexually mature at about age 10. They give birth to a single calf after a pregnancy lasting over a year. Three years is considered a normal or healthy interval between right whale births. But now, on average, females are having calves every 7 to 10 years. Biologists believe that the additional stress caused by entanglement is one of the reasons that females are calving less often.
Threats
North Atlantic right whales face many threats, including entanglement in fishing gear, vessel strikes, changing environmental conditions—which may alter their migratory patterns and feeding areas—and the impacts of ocean noise on their ability to communicate, find food, and navigate.
Entanglements
Entanglement in fishing gear is one of the primary threats to North Atlantic right whales. NOAA Fisheries and our partners estimate that over 85 percent of right whales have been entangled in fishing gear at least once. Fishing gear can cut into a whale’s body, cause serious injuries, and result in infections and mortality. Even if gear is shed or removed through disentanglement efforts, the time spent entangled can severely stress a whale, weaken it, prevent it from feeding, and sap the energy it needs to swim, feed, and reproduce. Chronic entanglements are one reason scientists think that female right whales are having fewer calves and are taking longer to have calves.
Vessel Strikes
Vessel strikes are another primary threat to North Atlantic right whales. Their habitat and migration routes are close to major ports along the Atlantic coastline, and they often stay close to shore, overlapping with shipping lanes and nearshore vessel traffic. This makes them vulnerable to collisions with vessels. These collisions can cause broken bones and massive internal injuries or cuts from propellers. Vessels of nearly any size can injure or kill a right whale. The faster a vessel is traveling when it hits a whale, the higher the likelihood of serious injury or death.
Changing Environmental Conditions
Changing environmental conditions, and more specifically oceanographic changes in the Northwest Atlantic, are key factors contributing to reduced reproduction and higher susceptibility to human-caused threats. Over the past decade, right whales have changed their distribution patterns, likely in response to changes in prey location and availability due to warming oceans. As their prey moved, the whales began spending more time in areas with fewer protections from vessel strikes and entanglements.
A dip in right whale births and longer calving intervals indicate that reproductively active females have struggled in recent years to find sufficient food resources to support pregnancy. As their environment changes, right whales will likely continue to modify their distribution and behavior to adapt, resulting in a more uncertain and unpredictable future for the species.
Ocean Noise
Ocean noise from human activities such as shipping, boating, construction, and energy exploration and development has increased in the Northwest Atlantic. Noise from these activities can interrupt the normal behavior of right whales and interfere with their communication. It may also reduce their ability to detect and avoid predators and human hazards, navigate, identify physical surroundings, find food, and find mates.
Scientific Classification
| Kingdom | Animalia | Phylum | Chordata | Class | Mammalia | Order | Cetacea | Family | Balaenidae | Genus | Eubalaena | Species | glacialis |
|---|
Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 05/19/2026
What We Do
Conservation & Management
We are committed to developing and implementing science based measures to recover the North Atlantic right whale. Our work includes:
- Removing rope and gear from entangled right whales
- Reducing the threat of vessel collisions
- Reducing injury and mortality in fishing gear
- Minimizing the effects of vessel disturbance and noise
Science
We conduct various research activities on the biology, behavior, and ecology of the North Atlantic right whale. The results of this research are used to inform management actions and enhance recovery efforts for this endangered species. Our work includes:
- Identifying habitat and when it is used by right whales
- Investigating unusual mortality events
- Performing stock assessments to gather population information
- Tracking individuals over time to monitor important population traits
How You Can Help
Report a Right Whale Sighting
Please report all right whale sightings from Maine to Virginia at (866) 755-6622 and from North Carolina to Florida at 877-WHALE-HELP/(877) 942-5343. Right whale sightings in any location may also be reported to the U.S. Coast Guard via channel 16 or through the Whale Alert app.
Include the date, time of day, location (e.g., latitude and longitude, or proximity to a landmark), contact information, and any other details or documentation about the observation including the number of whales, a description of what you saw (shape of the tail, flippers, or head). Photos and videos are particularly helpful.
If the animal is in distress, there are organizations around the country that are trained and ready to respond. Reporting a sighting of a sick, injured, entangled, stranded, or dead right whale helps professional responders and scientists know about it and take appropriate action. Never approach or try to save an injured or entangled animal yourself—it can be dangerous to both the animal and you.
Stay 500 Yards Away
To protect right whales, NOAA Fisheries has regulations that prohibit approaching or remaining within 500 yards (1,500 feet) of a right whale. That’s the length of about five football fields. These regulations apply to vessels and aircrafts (including drones) and to people using other watercrafts, such as surfboards, kayaks, and jet skis. Any vessel within 500 yards of a right whale must depart immediately at a safe, slow speed.
Call the NOAA Fisheries Enforcement Hotline at (800) 853-1964 to report a federal marine resource violation. This hotline is available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week for anyone in the United States.
Reduce Your Vessel Speed
Vessel collisions are a primary cause of injury and death for whales. Here are some tips to avoid collisions:
Be Whale Aware. Know where and when whales occur (habitat).
Reduce your speed at times and in areas where right whales are likely present. Keep speeds to 10 knots or less to reduce potential for injury.
Keep a sharp lookout. North Atlantic right whales are difficult to see. Look for black or dark objects, whitewater, splashes, and spouts. However, be aware that most mariners who have reported vessel collisions never saw the whale prior to colliding with it.
Protect your boat, protect your passengers. Vessels can be heavily damaged and even "totalled" after colliding with a large whale. Collisions can also injure passengers.
Know before you go. Check current right whale speed reduction zones and recent whale detections near you.
Stop immediately if within 500 yards. Slowly distance your vessel from the whale.
Be Informed and Get Involved
Here are some ways to engage with right whale take reduction and other conservation measures:
Be informed. For accurate information, check your sources or confirm them by reviewing our news and announcements, right whale health updates, and Road to Recovery activities.
Get alerts about Slow Zones. All boaters and interested parties can sign up here to receive email or text message notifications of new Right Whale Slow Zone dates, maps, and coordinates.
Take a boater education course. The See A Spout? Watch Out! program, the U.S. Coast Guard, state agencies, and other organizations offer courses that can help you safely operate your vessel around whales.
Featured News
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Road to Recovery
The most recent North Atlantic right whale population abundance estimate is approximately 380 whales—an increase of approximately 20 individuals since 2020. This marks the third consecutive year that the population has shown signs of increasing. We still estimate there to be only about 70 reproductively active females. While species abundance is increasing, and the sharp increase in mortalities over the last decade appears to have slowed, North Atlantic right whales continue to experience human-caused mortalities and serious injuries. There is an ongoing Unusual Mortality Event, which was declared in 2017.
Primary threats to the species—and drivers of the Unusual Mortality Event—are entanglement in fishing gear and vessel strikes. Changing ocean conditions are also affecting every aspect of their survival, including:
- Habitat
- Migratory patterns
- Location and availability of their prey
- Risk of becoming entangled in fishing gear or struck by vessels
The North Atlantic Right Whale Road to Recovery describes NOAA Fisheries’ efforts to address threats to the species and monitor recovery progress. It is built on the foundation of the statutory requirements of the Endangered Species Act and the Marine Mammal Protection Act. It shows how our collective actions, in collaboration with partners, fit together to help recover this iconic species. The strategy complements the North Atlantic right whale 2021–2025 Priority Action Plan by identifying our goals and related objectives. It tracks and communicates progress on major activities and associated milestones, examples of which are given below.
The Road to Recovery is a dynamic resource and will be updated regularly. The “Recent Activities and Milestones” below were last updated on March 3, 2026.
The efforts that pave the way on the Road to Recovery are only possible with the support and collaboration of many partners, such as the Marine Mammal Commission and Canada (see the 2021–2025 Priority Action Plan and Recovery Plan).
The North Atlantic right whale population viability analysis tool helps users explore how the population may change over 100 years if threats are mitigated. The tool was developed through a 5-year collaboration with partners from the United States and Canada. It helps guide our Road to Recovery, as it allows us to evaluate the scope of conservation activities needed. It also shows how successful our actions may be at recovering endangered North Atlantic right whales.
To reduce the risks identified in our Road to Recovery, we are making critical investments in monitoring, enforcement, and investigation of new technologies and innovative solutions.
Goal: Address Threats to the Species
For endangered North Atlantic right whales to recover, we are addressing existing and emerging threats to the species through three objectives:
- Address vessel strikes
- Address fishing gear entanglements
- Address potential and emerging threats
Vessel Strikes
North Atlantic right whales are sometimes referred to as the "urban whale" due to their proximity to populated, coastal environments. This proximity leads to strikes from vessels moving through these waters, resulting in injury or death. Reducing vessel strikes is necessary to recover the species. Since 2017, when the Unusual Mortality Event was declared, at least 18 right whales have been confirmed dead or observed seriously injured due to vessel strike. Many vessel strike injuries go undetected, as visual observations of live whales do not account for possibility of internal blunt force trauma injuries.
Recent Activities and Milestones
- Announcing an advance notice of proposed rulemaking requesting information to inform possible modernization of regulations designed to reduce the risk of lethal vessel strikes with endangered North Atlantic right whales
- Publishing two updated vessel strike risk-related models (Garrison et al. 2025 and Blondin et al. 2025), which characterize the probability that a vessel strike will cause death or serious injury for large whales based on vessel speed and size
- Holding a public workshop in March 2024, focused on developing new and emerging technologies to support vessel strike reduction
- Working with partners to expand a recently launched Automatic Identification System-based communication network for vessels traveling within Seasonal Management Areas
- Partnering with MITRE to focus on the development of technologies related to whale detection and vessel strike avoidance
- Working with the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation to support development of technologies to minimize risk from vessel strikes through the Vessel Strike Avoidance Fund
- Conducting public outreach and engagement to raise awareness of vessel strike risk, such as the annual calving season campaign, through web stories, videos, and social media posts
Fishing Gear Entanglements
North Atlantic right whales breed, feed, and move through areas of high fishing activity along the east coast of North America. This leads to incidental entanglements in fishing gear, a primary cause of right whale mortality and serious injury. Reducing entanglements is necessary to mitigate extinction risk given that more than 85 percent of the population has been entangled at some point in their lifetime. Since 2017, when the Unusual Mortality Event began, at least 46 right whales have been confirmed dead or observed seriously injured due to entanglement. Estimates suggest the true number is likely closer to 100 due to unobserved deaths.
Recent Activities and Milestones
- Issuing a final rule in February 2024 to amend the Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Plan to expand the boundaries of the Massachusetts Restricted Area to include the wedge between state and federal waters
- Planning for Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Team meetings in late 2026 and early 2027 for the Team to develop entanglement risk reduction recommendations to NOAA Fisheries, in order to have a final rule in place by December 31, 2028, as directed by Congress in the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2023
- Presenting webinars to prepare Team members for upcoming deliberative meetings
- Collaborating with fishermen and fishing gear manufacturers along the Atlantic coast to develop and test innovative fishing gear, such as on-demand, or ropeless, gear. Progress includes:
- Working with the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation on a grant program to support development of innovative fishing gear through the New England Gear Innovation Fund. The fund uses supplemental funding appropriated to NOAA Fisheries in the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2023
- Expanding the issuance of exempted fishing permits to allow fishermen to test on-demand gear in restricted waters in the Northeast and Southeast United States
- Publishing the On-Demand Gear Guide, which outlines next steps for providing fishermen options to use on-demand gear systems as an alternative to fishing with surface marking systems
- Publishing A Proposal for Functional Data Specifications of On-Demand Fishing Gear, which is based on public input gathered on operationalizing on-demand gear. We gathered input at multiple workshops with partners including fishermen, state resource managers, and enforcement officers
Potential and Emerging Threats
As human activities and environments change, right whales may face additional threats. These potential and emerging threats include impacts from changing environmental conditions, new and expanded ocean uses, and ocean noise. Assessing and mitigating threats are necessary to mitigate extinction risk.
Recent Activities and Milestones
- Issuing Marine Mammal Protection Act Incidental Take Authorizations and final Endangered Species Act Section 7 biological opinions for multiple offshore energy projects, which require specific measures to avoid and minimize impacts to right whales and to monitor and report on the impacts
Goal: Monitor Recovery Progress
Monitoring is crucial to track the status of right whales and evaluate the effectiveness of our efforts to address threats. To achieve this goal, the Road to Recovery focuses on three objectives:
- Monitor population and health
- Monitor threats
- Monitor effectiveness of conservation
Monitor Population and Health
Long-term monitoring of the population and health is critical for tracking the status of North Atlantic right whales over time. It provides an understanding of individual health and reproduction as well as distribution, abundance, and habitat-use patterns of the population.
Recent Activities and Milestones
- Updating the model underlying the North Atlantic right whale population viability analysis tool in 2025, which suggests current rates of mortality have been reduced compared to those experienced during the severe decline up to 2019
- Generating the annual North Atlantic right whale population estimate in collaboration with the New England Aquarium and publishing a technical memorandum describing the underlying analysis
- Analyzing subsamples of North Atlantic right whale skin using molecular/epigenetic techniques to assess biological aging
- Deploying SoundTraps, passive acoustic monitoring devices built for long-term continuous archival recording, to document North Atlantic right whale presence and movement in the Southeast
- Supporting annual aerial and vessel surveys in important whale habitats, like Cape Cod Bay and the Southeast calving grounds, to mitigate human activities and collect critical monitoring data
- Investigating innovative technological solutions to address some of the greatest threats to North Atlantic right whales under the Advanced Sampling and Technology for Extinction Risk Reduction and Recovery program, including cutting-edge vessel strike risk reduction technologies, satellite telemetry tagging, very high resolution satellite imagery, and enhanced modeling efforts
Monitor Threats
With changing ocean conditions and human activities, it is crucial to continually monitor threats to the species.
Recent Activities and Milestones
- Continuing to respond to and investigate the North Atlantic right whale Unusual Mortality Event, and reviewing previous cases of injury and illness to evaluate the health status of individuals based on our morbidity protocol for the UME
- Continuing work of the internal North Atlantic Right Whale Health Assessment Implementation Working Group to build an integrated health assessment program identifying priority questions and samples for analysis
- Authorizing the marine mammal stranding and entanglement response networks and working with them through the Marine Mammal Health and Stranding Response Program and its Prescott Grant Program, National Stranding Database, and stranding reports
- Tracking changing ocean conditions and changes in marine development activities, commercial fishing operations, and vessel traffic
Monitor Effectiveness of Conservation
To ensure our conservation efforts are effective, we regularly evaluate existing conservation efforts and seek means for improvement.
Recent Activities and Milestones
- Submitting the Recovering Threatened and Endangered Species Fiscal Year 2021–2022 Report to Congress, which summarizes efforts to recover all species listed as threatened or endangered under NOAA Fisheries' jurisdiction. The report highlights progress made on recovery efforts for our Species in the Spotlight—including North Atlantic right whales—and acknowledges our 2023 Partners in the Spotlight
- Working with the Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Team to regularly assess the effectiveness of existing fisheries mitigation measures and the need to further reduce entanglements in U.S. commercial fisheries
- Evaluating the effectiveness of mitigation and monitoring measures included in incidental take authorizations and consultations on activities other than commercial fishing, such as military training exercises, energy activities, and coastal development projects
- Evaluating and advancing monitoring and quieting technologies that reduce noise from human activities, such as vessels and construction
- Working with the Northeast Implementation Team and Southeast Implementation Team to coordinate regional recovery efforts and monitor progress related to the Recovery Plan
Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 05/19/2026
In the Spotlight
We added the North Atlantic right whale to the Species in the Spotlight initiative in 2019. This initiative is a strategic approach to endangered species recovery that focuses on highly at-risk species for which immediate, targeted actions can halt their decline and stabilize their populations.
The most recent abundance estimate for the population is approximately 380 whales—an increase of approximately 20 individuals since 2020. This marks the third consecutive year that the population has shown signs of increasing. While these are all positive signs for the species, it is important to focus on the longer term population trend. The population will need to increase significantly in order to recover.
NOAA and our partners are continuing to focus on implementing technological solutions to reduce threats to North Atlantic right whales. The Species in the Spotlight designation helps focus resources on these many efforts.
NOAA's Efforts to Recover the North Atlantic Right Whale
Under the Endangered Species Act, we are required to promote the recovery of the North Atlantic right whale. To fulfill these requirements, we are working to reduce risks from entanglement in fishing gear and vessel strikes. The Marine Mammal Protection Act provides a structure, through the Take Reduction Plan, for partner voices to be heard. It offers the opportunity for entanglement risk reduction innovation to come from the people who will be most affected by future regulatory action.
Species in the Spotlight Priority Actions
We developed a Species in the Spotlight Priority Action Plan that builds on the recovery plan. It details the focused efforts that are needed in the near term. The identified priorities incorporate input from our North Atlantic Right Whale Northeast and Southeast U.S. Implementation Teams. These actions include:
- Reducing entanglement in fishing gear
- Reducing the risk of vessel strikes
- Investigating population abundance, status, distribution, and health
- Collaborating with Canada on right whale recovery
- Improving our knowledge of additional factors limiting recovery
While North Atlantic right whales were only added to the Species in the Spotlight initiative in 2019, we have been working with our partners on helping this species recover for two decades. These are just some examples of this work.
Population Viability Analysis Tool
In October 2023, we released a population viability analysis tool. It was developed through a 5-year collaboration with partners from the United States and Canada. The tool helps users explore how the population may change over 100 years if threats are mitigated. The results demonstrated that rates of vessel strikes and entanglements experienced during 2013–2019 needed to be reduced considerably for the species to persist. An update to the model in October 2025 suggested current rates of mortality have been reduced compared to those experienced during the severe decline up to 2019.
New and Emerging Technologies
We continue to support the development of new and emerging technologies to minimize the risk of vessel strikes. In 2024, we held a Vessel Strike Risk Reduction Technology Workshop focused on developing new and emerging technologies to support vessel strike reduction. We worked with partners to launch an Automatic Identification System-based communication network for vessels traveling within Seasonal Management Areas.
Testing Fishing Gear
We have been collaborating with fishermen and fishing gear manufacturers along the Atlantic coast to develop and test innovative fishing gear, such as on-demand gear, in order to reduce the risk of entanglements. Testing the gear allows fishermen access to areas that are closed to standard trap-pot fishing methods. We published the On-Demand Gear Guide, which outlines steps for using on-demand gear systems as an alternative to fishing with surface marking systems.
Recommendations to Reduce Entanglement
In 2021, we implemented recommendations from the Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Team to reduce the risk of entanglement deaths and serious injuries for North Atlantic right whales. The resulting final rule amended the Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Plan to reduce this risk within Northeast American lobster and Jonah crab trap/pot fisheries.
Fund Right Whale Surveys
We continue to prioritize and fund a combination of passive acoustic, aerial, and vessel surveys for right whales along the East Coast. We work with federal and state agencies and research organizations on these efforts. This includes collaboration with Fisheries and Oceans Canada and Transport Canada to enhance transboundary monitoring.
More information on our many efforts to help North Atlantic right whales
2023 Partner in the Spotlight Award
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts’ Division of Marine Fisheries has led the way in implementing regulations to reduce both entanglement and vessel strike risk for North Atlantic right whales in state waters. Their mandatory fishing gear restrictions in state waters seasonally limit participation in commercial fixed gear fisheries that may entangle right whales. They also implement mandatory vessel speed limits in Cape Cod Bay during March and April. They have extended the mandatory restrictions in six out of nine closure years, including 2021 and 2022, into the month of May based on the continued presence of right whales in the area. These regulatory efforts in Massachusetts to reduce the two major threats to right whales are an important complement to NOAA Fisheries’ regulations.
2021 Partner in the Spotlight Award
Katie Moore, U.S. Coast Guard, has played a critical role in establishing, developing, and overseeing long-term partnerships between NOAA Fisheries and the USCG to further the recovery of North Atlantic right whales from Maine through Florida for close to 20 years. The USCG supports our stranding and disentanglement responders and communicates information about right whales to mariners. Katie’s coordination within USCG and with NOAA Fisheries is critical to successful outcomes. Katie also advises numerous NOAA Fisheries teams on the enforceability of proposed regulations aimed at reducing entanglement in fishing gear and vessel strikes.
2019 Partner in the Spotlight Award
The North Atlantic Right Whale Consortium includes more than 200 partners dedicated to conserving and recovering the species. It helps foster data sharing by providing access to various data contributed by investigators. This effort is critical to furthering information on North Atlantic right whales. Annual meetings of the Consortium provide a unique opportunity to bring partners together to share management and scientific information across the species’ range. Partnerships represented by those in the Consortium are critical to North Atlantic right whale recovery.
Learn more about the North Atlantic Right Whale Consortium’s work
Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 05/19/2026
Management Overview
The North Atlantic right whale is listed as endangered under the Endangered Species Act.
The North Atlantic right whale is protected throughout its range under the Marine Mammal Protection Act.
The North Atlantic right whale is depleted under the Marine Mammal Protection Act.
Additionally, the North Atlantic right whale is listed under:
- Appendix I of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora
- Annex II of the Protocol for Specially Protected Areas and Wildlife
The most recent abundance estimate for the population is approximately 380 whales—an increase of approximately 20 individuals since 2020. While this is a positive sign for the species, it is important to focus on the longer term population trend. The population will need to increase significantly in order to recover.
NOAA Fisheries continues to use the best available science to inform management decisions to recover North Atlantic right whales. We are focused on promoting a sustainable coexistence between thriving marine industries and the species.
Conservation Efforts
Reducing Vessel Strikes
Collisions between whales and large vessels often go unnoticed and unreported, even though whales can be injured or killed and vessels can sustain damage. Collisions with boats as small as 30 feet in length can be lethal to right whales, especially calves, and dangerous for boat passengers. The most common vessel-related injuries to right whales are blunt force trauma and propeller cuts.
We have taken steps to reduce the threat of vessel collisions to North Atlantic right whales, including:
- Requiring vessels to slow down in specific areas, known as Seasonal Management Areas, during specific times
- Implementing voluntary speed reductions in Dynamic Management Areas and Right Whale Slow Zones
- Implementing a 500-yard “no-approach” safety zone around right whales
- Recommending alternative shipping routes and areas to be avoided
- Modifying international shipping lanes
- Developing right whale alert systems
- Developing mandatory vessel reporting systems
- Increasing outreach and education
- Improving our stranding response
Vessel Speed Restrictions
The most effective way to reduce collision risk is to keep whales and vessels apart. If that is not possible, vessels can slow down and keep a lookout. The slower a vessel travels, the more time the whale has to get out of the way, and the less likely a collision is to result in serious injury or death.
In Seasonal Management Areas, along the East Coast, most vessels 65 feet or longer must slow to 10 knots or less during times of the year when right whales are likely to be present.
Outside of these areas, if three or more right whales are sighted within close proximity, we implement temporary voluntary speed reduction areas called Dynamic Management Areas. We also implement similar measures known as Right Whale Slow Zones when right whales are detected by underwater acoustic receivers.
As part of the Administration’s ongoing efforts to evaluate and improve regulations, NOAA has announced an advance notice of proposed rulemaking considering deregulatory action to modify the North Atlantic Right Whale Vessel Speed Rule.
Some states also regulate vessels to help minimize impacts. The Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries requires all vessels (including those less than 65 feet) to travel at speeds no greater than 10 knots in Cape Cod Bay during specific times of the year.
Mandatory Vessel Reporting System
To further reduce the number of vessel strikes, NOAA Fisheries and the U.S. Coast Guard developed and implemented a mandatory vessel reporting system for North Atlantic right whales. When large vessels enter one of two key right whale habitats—feeding areas off the U.S. northeast coast and calving habitat off the U.S. southeast coast—they must report to a shore-based station. The vessel then receives a message about right whales, their vulnerability to vessel strikes, precautionary measures to avoid hitting a whale, and locations of recent sightings.
Right Whale Sighting Advisory System
To reduce vessel collisions, mariners should use caution and proceed at safe speeds in areas where right whales are likely to be found. NOAA Fisheries and our partners developed an interactive mapping application to reduce collisions between vessels and right whales by alerting mariners to their presence. It provides near real-time information on North Atlantic right whale sightings along the U.S. East Coast and in Canada.
Reducing Entanglement
Entanglement in fishing gear is a primary cause of mortality and serious injury for North Atlantic right whales. Fishing gear, especially vertical line rope in the water column, can wrap around a whale, cut into its body, and cause serious injuries and death. Even gear that is removed through disentanglement efforts or falls off can severely stress a whale, weaken it, prevent it from feeding, and sap the energy it needs to swim, feed, and reproduce.
The Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Team is a group of fishermen, scientists, conservationists, and state and federal officials. It provides recommendations on how to reduce entanglements in U.S. commercial fisheries. We use those recommendations to develop management measures to reduce whale entanglements.
Specifically, we have taken these steps to reduce the threat of entanglement to North Atlantic right whales:
- Implementing seasonal closures to fixed gear commercial fisheries in areas where right whales are known to aggregate
- Requiring weak inserts or weak rope in fixed gear fisheries fishing to increase the likelihood that right whales can break free of buoy lines and gillnet panels
- Requiring fewer vertical buoy lines in trap/pot fisheries (known as trawling up) in areas where right whales occur
- Requiring sinking ground line (versus floating) between trap/pots and gillnet anchoring systems
- Mandating gear marking to improve our understanding of where and how right whales become entangled
- Increasing outreach and education
- Improving our stranding response
We are actively working with fishermen and manufacturers to test “on-demand,” or ropeless fishing gear, which will provide a future solution to prevent large whale entanglement.
Learn more about the Take Reduction Team's efforts to reduce whale entanglements
When entangled whales are reported anywhere along the East Coast, the NOAA-supported Atlantic Large Whale Disentanglement Network tries to help. The network is made up of emergency responders from 20 public and private organizations who have extensive training in how to disentangle large whales and increase their odds of surviving. The Network has successfully disentangled around 30 North Atlantic right whales over the years.
Examining gear removed from entangled animals is one of the key ways for us to determine whether regulations are working and fishing gear modifications are effective.
Overseeing Marine Mammal Health and Stranding Response
We work with volunteer networks in all coastal states to respond to marine mammal strandings. When stranded animals are found alive, NOAA Fisheries and our partners assess the animal’s health. When stranded animals are found dead, our scientists work to understand and investigate the cause of death. Although the cause often remains unknown, scientists can sometimes identify it—such as vessel strike, entanglement, disease, harmful algal blooms, pollution exposure, and underwater noise. Some strandings can serve as indicators of ocean health, giving insights into larger environmental issues that may also have implications for human health and welfare.
Addressing Ocean Noise
Underwater noise threatens marine animal populations, interrupting their normal behavior and driving them away from areas important to their survival. NOAA Fisheries is investigating all aspects of acoustic communication and hearing in marine animals, including the effects of sound on whale behavior and hearing. In 2016, we issued technical guidance for assessing the effects of human-made sound on marine mammals’ hearing.
Marine Mammal Unusual Mortality Events
There is an ongoing Unusual Mortality Event for North Atlantic Right Whales. An unusual mortality event is "a stranding that is unexpected; involves a significant die-off of any marine mammal population; and demands immediate response." Scientists carefully study unusual mortality events to determine the cause of these events and better understand the health of marine mammal populations.
International Collaboration
NOAA Fisheries collaborates with Canada through bilateral discussions on science and management efforts needed to recover North Atlantic right whales. It is crucial for both countries to take and sustain additional efforts to reduce right whale mortalities and serious injuries. Risk reduction measures and whale-safe maritime practices must be a shared responsibility. For example, we share innovative techniques and solutions that reduce risk to right whales while fostering healthy fisheries.
Recovery Plan
Under the Endangered Species Act, NOAA Fisheries is required to develop and implement recovery plans for the conservation and survival of listed species. The ultimate goal of the North Atlantic Right Whale Recovery Plan is to recover the species, with an interim goal of improving its status from endangered to threatened.
The major actions recommended in the plan are:
- Reduce or eliminate injury and mortality caused by vessel collisions and fishing gear
- Protect habitats essential to the survival and recovery of the species
- Minimize the effects of vessel disturbance
- Continue the international ban on whaling
- Monitor the population size and trends in abundance of the species
- Maximize efforts to free entangled or stranded right whales and acquire scientific information from dead specimens
Recovery Plan Implementation
To implement the North Atlantic right whale Recovery Plan, we established two regional implementation teams: the Northeast U.S. Implementation Team and the Southeast U.S. Implementation Team.
Critical Habitat Designation
NOAA Fisheries designated critical habitat for the North Atlantic right whale under the Endangered Species Act in 1994. We revised the designation in 2016 to support the species’ recovery. Critical habitat for the North Atlantic right whale includes two areas—a foraging area in the Northeast and a calving area in the Southeast.
Key Actions and Documents
Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 05/19/2026
Science Overview
NOAA Fisheries conducts research activities on the biology, behavior, and ecology of the North Atlantic right whale. The results of this research are used to inform management decisions and enhance recovery efforts for this endangered species.
We use a variety of methods to determine where right whales are located, including surveys with boats and planes, underwater acoustic listening devices, habitat modeling, and citizen science sighting reports. To better inform the public of the most recent right whale sightings, NOAA scientists maintain a database that displays near real-time whale sightings on an interactive map. This database, along with those maintained by our partners at the New England Aquarium, includes more than 40 years of reliable sightings data. They span the entire range of the species from Canada through Florida.
Aerial Surveys
Scientists use small aircraft to spot North Atlantic right whales and photograph them to identify individuals and record their seasonal distribution. Understanding the whales’ distribution patterns helps managers establish measures to reduce vessel strikes and fisheries interactions. NOAA Fisheries and our partners also use small uncrewed aircraft systems (drones) to assess individual right whale size and body condition. We also use drones to take breath samples to analyze factors such as genetics and stress hormones.
Shipboard Studies
We conduct vessel surveys that investigate the whales’ habitat preferences and feeding ecology and collect photographic and genetic identification. Information from this research can be used to inform management actions that protect the North Atlantic right whale.
As with our aerial surveys, the goals of many shipboard surveys are to photograph as many individual right whales as possible. We concentrate on places where we are most likely to find them at the surface, aggregating to feed or engaging in social behaviors. This helps us accurately estimate the population size and monitor population trends. Researchers use the photographs and other data collected (time, date, location, behavior) to investigate things like body condition, behavior, and life history. Over time, these data can also reflect changes in distribution.
If the whales aren’t feeding or socializing at the surface, their behavior can make them hard to spot (for example, if they’re engaged in deep dives or traveling while submerged). Sea state and weather also make it more challenging to spot whales.
Acoustics
Acoustics is the science of how sound is transmitted. This research involves:
- Increasing our understanding of the basic acoustic behavior of marine life
- Mapping the acoustic environment
- Developing better methods, such as using autonomous gliders and passive acoustic arrays, to locate animals
We use a variety of passive acoustic monitoring technologies to listen for right whale calls. This teaches us where and when these whales are present in areas (at least during times they are vocalizing) where visual surveys are not likely to be effective. For example, acoustic detections have shown that at least some right whales can be detected year-round in locations we once thought they only used seasonally.
Other research is focused on the acoustic environment of cetaceans, including North Atlantic right whales.
Learn more about acoustic science
Telemetry
Scientists attach small tracking and data collection devices, or tags, to right whales. The data we collect help us learn more about their location, behavior, movement, swim speed, habitat use, dive depth, and health.
Tags are not permanent, and the amount of time a tag remains attached to a right whale varies. It’s especially challenging to keep long-term tags attached to right whales since they often engage in physical contact with each other, putting tremendous stress on tags attached to their bodies. They also lack a dorsal fin, which is a commonly used attachment point in other species. We are working to develop a tag that can track right whales for longer periods.
Learn more about using tags to understand North Atlantic right whales
Stock Assessments
Determining the size of the North Atlantic right whale population—and whether it is increasing or decreasing from year to year—helps resource managers assess the success of the management measures enacted. Our scientists collect population information on right whales from various sources and present the data in an annual stock assessment report.
More Information
Science Blogs
Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 05/19/2026
Documents
Template Datasheet For Real-Time North Atlantic Right Whale Acoustic and Visual Observation Data
Template datasheet for providing passive acoustic detection and visual sighting data.
Passive Acoustic Detections Reports: North Atlantic Right Whale
Summary reports of North Atlantic right whale acoustic presence.
Recovering Threatened and Endangered Species Report to Congress (FY 2021-2022)
This Report to Congress summarizes efforts to recover all transnational and domestic species under…
North Atlantic Right Whale 5-Year Review
This document is the ESA 5-year review of the species based on the best available data.
Data & Maps
NOAA NEFSC North Atlantic Right Whale Acoustic Data and Annotations
These datasets are a compilation of acoustic data and associated annotation logs, collected in the…
North Atlantic Right Whale Sightings
Interactive map of North Atlantic right whale sightings.
South Island Restricted Area
This dataset depicts the boundaries of the South Island Restricted Area in effect annually from…
Massachusetts Restricted Area with State Waters Expansion and Wedge Area
This dataset depicts the boundaries of the Massachusetts Restricted Area in effect annually from…
Research
On-Demand Gear Guide
A roadmap for providing fishermen an option to use on-demand fishing systems in the Greater Atlantic Region by 2028.
Satellite Monitoring of North Atlantic Right Whales
Geospatial Artificial Intelligence For Animals uses high-resolution satellite imagery to detect endangered North Atlantic right whales
Population Size Estimate for North Atlantic Right Whales
Population size estimation of North Atlantic right whales from 1990-2024.
2024 Northeast Experimental On-Demand Gear System Testing Completed
We tested on-demand (also called ropeless) fishing gear in state and federal waters that are closed to lobster and Jonah crab fishing that use static vertical lines.
Outreach & Education
How to Identify and Report North Atlantic Right Whales
This guide helps you identify North Atlantic right whales and report sightings. The North Atlantic…
Protected Marine Species Identification Guide Southeast United States
This guide is intended for use by mariners in the identification and reporting of threatened and…
Northeast Trap/Pot Guide for Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Plan
Guide to Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Plan regulations for Northeast trap/pot fishermen…
Fact Sheet: Summary of Proposed Risk Reduction Rule to Modify the Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction Plan
Summary of the proposed “Risk Reduction Rule” to modify the Atlantic Large Whale Take Reduction…
Last updated by NOAA Fisheries on 05/19/2026