L92 Crewser: 1995-2017
Probable grandson of L26 Baba
Son of L60 Rascal
Brother of L81 Raina
Probable nephew of L52 Salish, L71 Hugo, and L90 Ballena
Probable cousin of L128
(Dave Ellifrit - July 18, 2017)

seen from Maldives
seen from China

seen from France
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from China
seen from Italy
seen from France

seen from United States

seen from Japan
seen from Türkiye

seen from Japan
seen from Japan
seen from Switzerland

seen from Japan
seen from Italy
seen from China

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
L92 Crewser: 1995-2017
Probable grandson of L26 Baba
Son of L60 Rascal
Brother of L81 Raina
Probable nephew of L52 Salish, L71 Hugo, and L90 Ballena
Probable cousin of L128
(Dave Ellifrit - July 18, 2017)
Following the suspected death of an orca whale nicknamed Crewser, the population of southern resident orca whales is the lowest it has been in 34 years, The Seattle Times reported Saturday.
This is the orca known as L92 Crewser.
Excerpt:
Following the suspected death of an orca whale nicknamed Crewser, the population of southern resident orca whales is the lowest it has been in 34 years, The Seattle Times reported Saturday.
The Center for Whale Research (CWR) declared the whale, officially known as L92, "missing and presumed dead" on Friday. L92 had not been seen since November 2017 and was "conspicuously absent" from 2018 sightings. He was 23 years old.
With L92s death, the number of southern resident orca whales, who travel between waters in Washington State and southwestern British Columbia, fell to 75, the lowest it has been since 1984. Orca whales were listed as an endangered species under the U.S. Endangered Species Act in 2005.
Despite a baby boom, the southern orca population has fallen by eight since 2016, The Canadian Press reported.
Deaths are being blamed on a decline in Chinook salmon, the whale's main prey, as well as noise and boat traffic, The Seattle Times reported.
Conservationists are concerned that the increased shipping associated with the Trans Mountain pipeline could exacerbate these risks, since it will increase tanker traffic in the Salish Sea by 700 percent, according to the Raincoast Conservation Foundation.
"Even without oil spills the additional noise from Kinder Morgan tanker traffic increases the risk of extinction to already imperilled Southern Residents. Today's approval of the Kinder Morgan project sanctions the probable extinction of Southern Resident killer whales. We are now considering our options including additional legal action," Raincoast Executive Director Chris Genovali said in 2016, when the pipeline was first approved.
Woodcut print of Crewser
The Southern Resident killer whales lost another member - there are now only 75 left
The Southern Resident killer whales lost another member – there are now only 75 left
The Center for Whale Research has confirmed the absence of 23 year old L92, Crewser. He was in the prime of life.
The remaining Southern Residents have changed their use of the Salish Sea – which includes Puget Sound and extends up to the Georgia Strait in Canada – and may eventually find this region an unsuitable habitat for their needs unless we move swiftly and decisively to restore Chinook…
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Whelp... Thank god for #burstmode!! #orcas #sanjuanislands #tbt #crewser
L-92 Crewser
L90 Ballena & L92 Crewser. Photo by Alisa Lemire Brooks, July 19, 2013.