Alaska Marine Mammal Stranding Network | NOAA Fisheries
Alaska Marine Mammal Stranding Network
If you see a stranded, injured, entangled, or dead marine mammal, call the NOAA Fisheries Alaska Statewide 24-hour Stranding Hotline: (877) 925-7773. Learn more about how you can properly help marine mammals in need.
Alaska
On This Page
How to Report a Stranding
About the Stranding Network
Resources
Stranding Reports and Newsletters
Alaska Stranding Network Members
More Information
NOAA Fisheries biologist, Sadie Wright, examines a stranded killer whale near Petersburg, Alaska.
A stranded animal is one that is dead on the beach or in the water, one that is alive on land and unable to return to the water and/or in need of medical attention, or a live animal in the water that is unable to return to its natural habitat under its own power or without assistance.
How to Report a Stranding
Please let us know if you see injured, entangled or dead whales, seals or sea lions in the water or on the beach. The most important information to collect is the date, location of stranding (including latitude and longitude), number of animals, and species. Take pictures from different angles if you are able. Please don't move or touch the animal. Contact Information
NOAA Fisheries
Alaska Statewide 24-hour Stranding Hotline: (877) 925-7773 or (877) 9-AKR-PRD
Alaska SeaLife Center Stranding Hotline: (888) 774-7325
Report a Death or Injury of a Marine Mammal During Commercial Fishing Operations
NOTE
: If the stranded animal is a walrus, sea otter, or polar bear, call the Marine Mammals Management Office of the US Fish and Wildlife Service in Anchorage ((800) 362-5148 FREE, business hours) or the Alaska SeaLife Center in Seward ((888) 774-7325, 24-hrs).
About the Stranding Network
The Alaska Region Marine Mammal Stranding Network was created to provide a consistent framework in which to collect and compile data about marine mammal strandings throughout the entire state. The network is composed of state and federal wildlife and fisheries agencies, veterinary clinics, Alaska Native organizations, and academic institutions who respond to or provide professional advice on handling strandings.
A stranded animal is one that is dead on the beach or in the water, one that is alive on land and unable to return to the water and/or in need of medical attention, or a live animal in the water that is unable to return to its natural habitat under its own power or without assistance. In most cases, the cause of the stranding is unknown; some identified causes have included pup abandonment, injuries from ship strikes or fishery entanglements, pollution exposure, trauma, disease and starvation. While most stranded animals are found dead, some strand alive. In a limited number of cases it's possible to transport individuals to regional rehabilitation centers for care, where they are treated with the objective of returning them to the wild. In the Alaska Region, the Alaska SeaLife Center in Seward handles all marine mammal rehabilitation.
Stranded animals may provide information on species geographical distribution, feeding habits, reproduction, age distribution, diseases, parasites, and contaminant levels. If strandings are reported quickly, the network also may facilitate the rapid identification of mass mortalities or strandings caused by disease or toxicity/pollution problems. By conducting necropsies on dead stranded animals, it is also possible to learn more about the basic physiology and biology of animals not accessible in the wild or by any other means. Necropsies also have provided data on the incidence of human interactions including ship strikes, shootings, entanglements, and marine debris ingestions. These data help NOAA Fisheries to make better management decisions about these stocks of marine mammals.
Without authorization from NOAA Fisheries, the public cannot pick up stranded marine mammals. However, assistance in documenting the incident is helpful and will allow stranding network members to respond. The most important information to collect is the date, location of stranding (including latitude and longitude), number of animals, and species, if known. Photos are also very valuable.
Specimens of the small or rare cetaceans, especially those that are in good condition, may be of interest to museums. Researchers sometimes need specific tissues from other species for various projects. The stranding network office in Juneau will help to establish communication among stranding network members and between museums and researchers and persons or agencies that report strandings.
Biologists, Kate Savage and Kim Raum-Suryan, measure an adult male Steller sea lion observed on a Copper River Delta, Alaska, carcass survey.
Resources
Pinnipeds
Pinniped Entanglement
Guidelines for Safely Deterring Marine Mammals
Educational Resources (videos and signage) for fishermen and harbor users
about Steller sea lions and harbor seals
Health Evaluation of Ringed Seals Documented in the Southern Bering Region, Winter 2017-Spring 2018
NOAA Fisheries 2015 Pinniped and Cetacean Oil Spill Response Guidelines
Whales
Large Whale Entanglement
U.S. Whale Entanglement Response Level 1 - Alaska Region Course
Photographing Stranded Beluga Whales for Identification
- CIBW Photo-ID Project Protocol, LGL Alaska Research Associates, Inc., January 2015
Summary of Reported Whale-Vessel Collisions in Alaskan Waters
, Neilson et al., Journal of Marine Biology, 2012
Multispecies
Map of Alaska Stranding Network Member and Regional Subarea Locations
Unusual Marine Mammal Mortality Events Working Group
Alaska Oil Spill Response Guidance
Health and Safety Information for Animal Care Workers
Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement on the Marine Mammal Health and Stranding Response Program
, February 2009
Alaska Fisheries Science Center Publications Database
(Search for "strandings" and select NMML)
University of Alaska Museum Specimen Database
(external website)
Marine Mammal Laboratory
Prescott Marine Mammal Rescue Assistance Grant Program
Stranding Reports and Newsletters
Annual Reports
Newsletters
Copper River Delta Marine Mammal Carcass Surveys - Annual Reports
2018 Sitka Steller Sea Lion Response: Hazing, Rescue, Relocation
Initial stages of a stranding network necropsy of a humpback whale near Ketchikan, Alaska.
Alaska Stranding Network Members
Alaska Consortium of Zooarchaeologists
Alaska Department of Fish and Game
Alaska Sea Grant Marine Advisory Program
Alaska Sealife Center
Alaska Veterinary Pathology Services
The Alaska Whale Foundation
Aleut Community of St. Paul
and
Fur Seal Disentanglement Project
Rachel Berngartt, DVM
Chichagof Conservation Council
Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve
NOAA Fisheries Alaska Region
North Slope Borough
The Petersburg Marine Mammal Cente
Sun'aq Tribe of Kodiak
University of Alaska Southeast, Juneau
University of Alaska Southeast, Sitka
University of Alaska Fairbanks, Museum of the North
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Alaska Region
U.S. Forest Service, Alaska
More Information
Entanglement and Marine Debris
Understanding Vessel Strikes
Unusual Mortality Events
National Marine Mammal Health and Stranding Response Program
Alaska Protected Resources Division
Alaska Regional Office
on 12/01/2025
Marine Mammal Health and Stranding Response Program