AN ORCA task force has been tracking the vengeful White Gladis and her ruthless gang who have been smashing yachts off the coast of Gibraltar.
Rogue killer whales have been attacking seafarers and sinking vessels in the Strait of Gibraltar for at least three years now.
The moment a killer whale surrounded a tourist boat before attacking it off the coast of Sesimbra, Portugal in 2023Another orca circled a small boat and slammed the vessel in an hour-long attack last year near MoroccoOrcas surrounded a yacht and rammed it repeatedly during an attack near IbizaJust last Sunday, a pod of orcas pummeled the 50ft Alboran Cognac with two people onboard.
Passengers onboard the vessel said they felt sudden blows to the hull before it started sinking in the Moroccan waters.
Mandarin who accused Raab of bullying made huge blunder in Gibraltar talksThey were rescued by a nearby oil tanker which dropped them to Gibraltar after receiving emergency alerts.
The 50ft yacht was left abandoned before it sank completely.
Orca attacks on boats travelling through the Strait of Gibraltar - also known as Orca Alley - were first reported in 2020.
These ambushes, which range from orcas simply approaching boats to actively interfering with them, have repeatedly occurred in the stretch of water between Spain and Morocco.
After studying extensive footage, experts believe that more than half of these attacks were led by the traumatised White Gladis along with pals Black Gladis and Grey Gladis.
A nature conservation group called the Atlantic Orca Task Force (GTOA) has been tracking these killer whales attacking the vessels.
The organisation reported a 298% rise in orca-boat interactions with 673 such cases recorded between 2020 and 2024.
These also include instances where no contact between the orcas and the boats was made.
Authorities noticed a steady uptick in incidents and restricted boats from sailing from the tip of Spain due to a staggering 29 reported orca attacks in four months.
While monitoring, the group reported seven shipwrecks - five of which were yachts and two fishing vessels - as a result of the direct attacks.
I saw killer whale as she tried to sink my boat - I know why she's on rampageRui Alves, another orca enthusiast, launched a website called orcas.pt to monitor these attacks.
According to the tracking system, there was at least one killer whale encounter every single day in the area in June last year.
"We are having one incident every day, on average. There are days we have two or three," Alves said in an interview with PBS.
In what is being called an "Orca uprising", scientists fear White Gladis could possibly be teaching other whales - especially calves - how to attack and sink boats passing through the channel.
The female orca started ramming boats in the summer of 2020 and later gave birth to her calf in 2021, LiveScience reports.
And as orca pregnancies usually last for almost 15 months, scientists believe she was pregnant when she started attacking the vessels.
What baffled scientists is that mum orcas typically look after newborn calves for at least two years - providing them with food and safety.
But ramming yachts and tearing off rudders of small boats is something not expected from a new mum like White Gladis.
The unusual behaviour led scientists to believe something "unusual happened" with the killer shark that forced her to go rogue.
RECENT ATTACKS
A killer whale gang furiously attacked and sunk a boat near a Moroccan port last year in November.
The Polish company that was operating the boat said all attempts to rescue the yacht failed before it sunk.
The operator said the crew were "safe, unharmed, and sound" following the bizarre incident.
They said in a statement: "Despite attempts to bring the yacht to the port by the captain, crew and rescuers from the SAR (Search and Rescue), port tugs and the Moroccan Navy, the unit sunk near the entrance to the port of Tanger Med."
Another incident took place in August when a boat full of panicked tourists was attacked by a pod of killer whales.
Footage showed the horrified holidaymakers surrounded by several orcas just off the coast of Sesimbra, Portugal.
Last year, Brit couple Janet Morris, 58, and Stephen Bidwell, 58, from Cambridge, were involved in a whale attack that lasted for an hour.
On May 2, around six orcas reportedly rammed the hull of the Bavaria 46 cruiser yacht they were travelling on, on the Strait of Gibraltar.
Janet and Stephen were stunned when they were alerted with the cry of “orcas!”
Stephen told The Telegraph: “It was an experience I will never forget.
“I kept reminding myself we had a 22-ton boat made of steel, but seeing three of them coming at once, quickly and at pace with their fins out of the water was daunting.”
Janet added: “We were sitting ducks.”
“A clearly larger matriarch was definitely around and was almost supervising,” Stephen added, furthering speculation that it was White Gladis.
The captain of the boat, Greg Blackburn, from Leeds, dropped the mainsail to make the vessel feel “as boring as possible”.
The group of whales and their gang leader eventually lost interest - after causing thousands of pounds worth of damage.