Rare Orca Pod Crashes San Diego Coast, Scripps Snaps The Shots

A rare pod of killer whales turned San Diego’s coastline into a live nature documentary this week, and Scripps Institution of Oceanography had front-row seats. On Tuesday, Scripps shared striking photos of a small group of Eastern Tropical Pacific killer whales cruising just off the local coast, with close-up shots that researchers say are gold for identifying and tracking these elusive visitors.

Student researcher behind the lens

In its Facebook post, Scripps credited the photos to Nicole Schriber, according to Scripps Institution of Oceanography on Facebook. The UC San Diego campus directory lists Schriber as a master’s student at Scripps, and she has described working as a deckhand and naturalist for the charter outfit Gone Whale Watching while building photo‑ID records, per a recent Planet People podcast interview.

Why the sighting is unusual

These particular orcas are not your typical San Diego regulars. Eastern Tropical Pacific killer whales usually roam far to the south, so seeing an entire pod in Southern California waters is considered a rare treat. When they do push north, experts note they often shadow dense dolphin groups, and a recent run of ETP sightings in SoCal has been tracked in regional coverage, according to the Los Angeles Times.

How the photos help research

For scientists, these are not just pretty pictures. Detailed photographs allow researchers to recognize individual whales by nicks, scars and markings, then match those IDs across months or years without resorting to invasive tagging. When those visual IDs are paired with underwater sound recordings, researchers can map where the animals travel and how they behave over time.

The Scripps Acoustic Ecology Lab notes that combining visual sightings with acoustic data makes it easier to track when and where different cetacean species show up along the coast. Schriber has also talked in that podcast interview about working on an Eastern Tropical Pacific photo‑ID guide that links sightings from Alaska all the way down to Southern California.

Local operators and recent footage

Out on the water, San Diego’s whale‑watch community has been busy. Charter captains, drone pilots and naturalists have been rolling cameras on the pod throughout the winter, feeding researchers a steady stream of observation data along with some jaw‑dropping clips…

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