In the rugged waters of southern Alaska, resident killer whales—also known as fish-eating or “resident” orcas—are displaying a remarkable dietary flexibility that may hold significant implications for their resilience and the management of their prey species. Recent research published in the journal Ecosphere has revealed that these apex predators do not rely on a singular food source, as was once thought, but instead consume a diverse array of fish species that vary both spatially and temporally across their foraging grounds.
As apex predators, killer whales play a critical role in marine ecosystems, influencing the population dynamics of their prey and potentially shaping community structures. For decades, the common understanding of the diets of fish-eating residents centered primarily around Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha), a large and energy-rich prey species. However, advancements in molecular biology and non-invasive sampling techniques are now painting a far more nuanced picture.
Scientists embarked on a meticulous investigation spanning the Prince William Sound and Kenai Fjords regions, employing a combination of traditional prey sampling and cutting-edge DNA metabarcoding analyses of fecal matter. These methods have allowed researchers not only to identify visible prey remains such as scales and flesh fragments but also to detect species that are otherwise elusive to surface observations. The long-term monitoring program underlying this study, initiated in 1984 by the North Gulf Oceanic Society, laid the groundwork for this contemporary research effort.
The data collected from roughly 400 prey remnants and scat samples, gathered during active foraging months from May through September, demonstrated significant shifts in primary prey species. Depending on the specific foraging hotspots and the time of year, killer whales exhibited preferences oscillating among Chinook, chum (Oncorhynchus keta), and coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch). These fluctuations suggest adaptive foraging strategies that enable whales to exploit varying prey availability across habitats and seasons.
Importantly, the study uncovered that resident killer whales’ diets are not solely composed of salmonids. Groundfish species such as Pacific halibut (Hippoglossus stenolepis), arrowtooth flounder (Atheresthes stomias), and sablefish (Anoplopoma fimbria) also contribute meaningfully to their nutritional intake. For certain pods—matrilineal family groups—groundfish are integral to their dietary regime. This observation challenges previous presumptions that categorized resident orcas as salmon specialists and underscores dietary plasticity that may buffer populations against fluctuating salmon returns.
The employment of DNA-based techniques to analyze fecal samples marks a paradigm shift in diet studies of marine mammals. These techniques help overcome biases inherent in traditional methods, such as the overrepresentation of species with more easily identifiable scales or flesh fragments. In this study, while Chinook samples were the most frequently recovered, their detectability bias was accounted for, illuminating the nuanced importance of other species that may be undercounted in surface sampling efforts.
Hannah Myers, assistant professor at the University of Alaska Fairbanks College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences and lead author, emphasized the ecological significance of these findings. She noted that the observed prey switching between salmon species and inclusion of diverse groundfish represents a departure from the traditional narrative of Chinook-dominated diets. The spatial and temporal dynamics unraveled through this multidisciplinary approach reveal complex trophic interactions that are critical for understanding ecosystem functionality.
Researchers painstakingly followed the whales during foraging events, interpreting subtle behavioral cues such as tight directional turns and characteristic surface movements indicative of fish chases. Sampling prey involved delicate netting of scales and flesh from the water surface, while fecal samples were collected by trailing whales at safe distances and retrieving scat material floating in wake upwellings. This combination of behavioral observation and molecular tools provided an unprecedentedly detailed snapshot of killer whale feeding ecology.
Fish-eating killer whales constitute the most widespread killer whale ecotype in the North Pacific, inhabiting a range that extends from Southeast Alaska to Kodiak Island and beyond. Unlike their mammal-eating or shark-eating counterparts, resident orcas form matrilineal pods that remain stable over lifetimes, underscoring the potential for culturally transmitted foraging behaviors. Understanding the variability in their diet is key to appreciating how these social animals adapt to environmental fluctuations.
From a fisheries management perspective, the findings have practical implications. Accurate estimates of natural fish mortality caused by predation directly influence stock assessments, harvest quotas, and conservation strategies. A more detailed accounting of predator-prey dynamics, based on comprehensive diet analyses, will allow resource managers to make informed decisions that balance ecosystem health with economic and cultural needs.
Co-author Dan Olsen of the North Gulf Oceanic Society highlighted the promise held by fecal DNA studies, noting that these methods may reveal even greater dietary variability during seasonal or interannual lean periods. Such diversity could be integral to the population’s ability to withstand shifts in prey availability caused by climate change or human activities—a crucial insight amid growing concerns over marine ecosystem resilience.
Collaborators on this study included researchers from several institutions, such as Amy Van Cise from the University of Washington, Kim Parsons and Abigail Wells from the Northwest Fisheries Science Center, and Craig Matkin with the North Gulf Oceanic Society. Their collective expertise in marine biology, molecular ecology, and behavioral observation brought a comprehensive perspective to this groundbreaking study.
In conclusion, the emerging understanding of southern Alaska’s resident killer whales reveals a complex, adaptable predator whose diverse diet spans multiple salmon species and bottom-dwelling groundfish. This dietary breadth, fluctuating across time and space, nuances prior views and provides crucial insights into predator-prey interactions and ecosystem dynamics. As researchers continue to delve deeper into these oceanic food webs using innovative techniques, our grasp of marine mammal ecology and its implications for sustainable fisheries and conservation will continue to grow.
Subject of Research: Diet diversity and spatiotemporal shifts in prey consumption by southern Alaska resident killer whales
Article Title: The diverse diet of southern Alaska resident killer whales shifts across spatiotemporally distinct foraging hotspots
News Publication Date: 14-Dec-2025
Web References:
https://doi.org/10.1002/ecs2.70509
Image Credits: Photo by Eva Saulitis/North Gulf Oceanic Society
Keywords: Killer whales, resident orcas, Alaska, fish-eating, diet diversity, salmon, groundfish, DNA metabarcoding, fecal analysis, foraging behavior, marine ecology, predator-prey dynamics, ecosystem resilience

