03-02-2025, 04:07 PM
A wildlife photographer in Japan was taking pictures of Orcas, when he spotted a white male Orca in the pod.
He came back the next day to try for more pictures of the white whale. Instead he got pictures of a different white orca, this time a female.
The two white orcas are interacting normally with the rest of the pod and seem to be healthy. They also seem to be leucistic rather than albino.
They are white, but their eyes are dark.
https://www.thedodo.com/daily-dodo/wildl...ca-on-film
Seeing one white orca is the experience of a lifetime. Seeing two is unbelievable. They are beautiful.
Wouldn't it be amazing if there were more of them in the future.
He came back the next day to try for more pictures of the white whale. Instead he got pictures of a different white orca, this time a female.
The two white orcas are interacting normally with the rest of the pod and seem to be healthy. They also seem to be leucistic rather than albino.
They are white, but their eyes are dark.
https://www.thedodo.com/daily-dodo/wildl...ca-on-film
Seeing one white orca is the experience of a lifetime. Seeing two is unbelievable. They are beautiful.
Wouldn't it be amazing if there were more of them in the future.
Catherine