hi, i'm dailyorca. i yap about orcas—daily!
feel free to request an orca, or simply send in any ask. come echolocate! i interact back from @pawscope! scroll to the bottom of this post for more info about me 🐕
POD MEMBERS ⤵
134: Nalani, first inbred orca to survive in captivity 133: HW-OO05ETP-0019 “Luna”, biggest of the SoCal pod 132: Nyar 131: K21 “Cappuccino”, the oldest living southern resident male at the time of his death 130: Pascuala, youngest orca to be rescued 129: T054 “Seaforth”, lone male 128: C10 “Koeye”, matriarch of C10s 127: K40 “Raggedy”, part of a matriline known for pod-wandering 126: Gudrun 125: Junior, who spent five years alone in the warehouse 124: PTN-004 “Maga”, matriarch of the PTN-004s
123: T65A “Artemis”, matriarch of the T65As 122: A69 “Midsummer” 121: Kiska, the "World's Loneliest Orca" 120: T046B5, first calf to succumb to infanticide 119: K1 “Taku”, first orca to be radio-tagged and released 118: Winston, first orca to live at Windsor Safari Park in England 117: J27 “Blackberry” 116: Surfer Girl, who was rescued and lived briefly at Marine World Africa 115: O-1087, first orca to be caught by humans and taken to a facility 114: PTN-005 “Ishtar”, former matriarch of the PTN-005s 113: C3 “Booker” 112: AV110 "Galkin”, part of Avacha Clan 111: A72 “Bend”, who has a unique nick in the front of her fin 110: Kyara, last calf born at SeaWorld 109: T007B “Spiller”, matriarch of the Secret Agents 108: A60 “Fife” 107: K27 “Deadhead” 106: J31 “Tsuchi” 105: Bjossa, last orca to live at Vancouver Aquarium 104: Malia 103: Keto 102: B7 “Scarlet”, one of the oldest northern residents 101: OM015 “Arion”, north Indian orca who migrated 2,000+ miles 100: W008 “Aquarius”, one of the two remaining west coast community orcas 99: T002C2 “Tumbo”, Bigg's orca with scoliosis 98: SN0135 “Keiko II”, Icelandic orca bearing a resemblance to Keiko 97: ANT-A-90 “Osta” 96: Typee, a killer of Eden 95: Narnia, first successfully captured Russian orca 94: NZ15 “Corkscrew”, male with a corkscrew-like fin 93: T002B “Pedder”, 92: B13 “Yuculta”, only northern resident with fully collapsed fin 91: Bingo, most prolific sire in Japan 90: K20 “Spock”, matriarch of K13s and was thought to be male 89: Chimo, only captive albino orca 88: Female Ross Sea Orca, possible mother of twins 87: J8 “Speiden”, 80 year old southern resident 86: Sonya, captive orca in China who gave birth in March 85: Nakai 84: L88 “Wavewalker” 83: A23 “Stripe”, mother of Corky II 82: Naya, last remaining orca at Moskvarium 81: SN090 “Floppy”, one of the only Icelandic orcas with fully collapsed fin 80: Stumpy, disabled orca who is cared for by other orcas 79: Moby Doll, second captive orca 78: Kasatka, former matriarch of SeaWorld San Diego pod 77: SN0113 “Riptide”, who swam 4,970 miles 76: L129, southern resident calf born in February 75: Mamuk, who lived at Sea-Arama Marineworld 74: Orkid, smartest captive orca 73: L90 “Ballena”, one of the orcas who got stuck in Dyes Inlet 72: Ishmael, one of two orcas to be used in the Navy 71: NZ101 “Ben”, who survived stranding and getting hit by a boat 70: A12 “Scimitar”, northern resident with a sword-like fin 69: Stella (ステラ), most prolific captive Japanese orca 68: Morgan, deaf orca who was rescued 67: J50 “Scarlet”, calf who was given veterinary care 66: L22 “Spirit”, second oldest living southern resident 65: Tilikum, star of Blackfish 64: Hugo, Tokitae's last companion 63: White Gladis, orca leading attacks on boats 62: T046D “Strider” 61: K47, the southern residents' second youngest orca 60: Cuddles, England's first captive orca 59: Hooky, one of the Killers of Eden 58: J45 “Se-Yi’-Chn” 57: CA216B “Jagged”, a transient with a wavy fin 56: CA171B “Fatfin”, a transient with a very thick and triangular fin 55: CO539 “Iceberg”, a resident with white coloration 54: T011A “Rainy”, a lone transient 53: T46E “Thor” 52: Trua 51: T123 “Sidney”, matriarch of the T123s 50: T019B “Galiano”
49: Wikie, who can mimic human speech 48: Ulises, oldest male captive orca 47: J26 “Mike”, named after Dr. Michael Bigg 46: K5 “Sealth”, who has a sculpture built of him 45: CA2, part of the mysterious LA pod 44: AT6 “Egagutak”, a Chugach transient who survived an oil spill 43: L86 “Surprise!”, an orca whose birth came as a surprise 42: Sakari 41: ETP14 “Kali”, part of the SoCal pod 40: Katina, a 50 year old orca who’d been SeaWorld Orlando’s matriarch 39: W001 “John Coe”, part of the west coast community made up of only one other orca 38: J1 “Ruffles”, the first southern resident to be catalogued 37: A30 “Tsitika”, a northern resident who has many grand and great grandchildren 36: J63, born in 2025 and is the third youngest southern resident 35: NZ68 “Funky Monkey”, a New Zealand orca with a funky fin 34: L83 “Moonlight”, one of the orcas who got stuck in Dyes Inlet 33: Kshamenk, last captive orca in Argentina, who lived 25 years alone 32: SN0540 “Sædís”, who adopted a pilot whale calf 31: PTN-001 “Mel”, one of the first to purposely strand for sea lions 30: Shamu, SeaWorld’s first orca 29: Tyson, one of the largest captive orcas 28: Taku 27: Corky II, oldest captive orca 26: ANT-A-15 “Eclipse”, who has most of her fin missing 25: Wanda, first captive orca 24: L72 “Racer”, matriarch of the L72s 23: L41 “Mega”, one of the most prolific southern resident males 22: T046B1B “Tl’uk”, who had white coloration 21: T1 “Charlie Chin”, who had an underbite 20: J22 “Oreo”, matriarch of the J22s 19: Keiko, orca in Free Willy 18: Old Thom, lone male who only travels with white-sided dolphins 17: EA_0002 “Split Fin”, whose fin is split 16: CA165 “Lonesome George”, the biggest known orca 15: J16 “Slick”, oldest living J pod orca 14: J40 “Suttles”, who closely resembles Granny 13: Makani, SeaWorld’s youngest orca 12: L25 “Ocean Sun”, the oldest orca 11: A1 “Stubbs”, first orca to be catalogued 10: L98 “Luna”, a lost calf who spent his life befriending humans 9: Tokitae, the second oldest orca to live in captivity 8: C11 “Namu”, third captive orca 7: J2 “Granny”, who’d been one of the oldest of the southern residents 6: Port and Starboard, two males who hunt sharks together 5: T063 “Chainsaw”, who has a chainsaw-like fin 4: CA216C1 “Frosty”, who has white coloration 3: Old Tom, the most known of the Killers of Eden 2: J35 “Tahlequah”, who mournfully carried her late calf for 17 days 1: A73 “Springer”, the first orca to be both rescued and successfully returned to the wild
✶ ABOUT ME ⤵
🐾 my name is pawscope, or lukan! 16
🔍 my main interest is nature, particularly zoology. i love learning about evolution and taxonomy and all that cool stuf! 🧬 i am an animal science student at an agricultural school, where i work at both a farm and small animal lab:) i have goals to pursue wildlife biology or field biology. conservation means a lot to me ^_^
🐬 my fav orcas are A73 springer, orkid, + makani i am anti-captivity pro-welfare whaterver
🐕 besides orcas, i also really like dogs, especially working dogs. i love to learn about the many jobs dogs have been bred to do! particularly detection dogs like wildlife detection dogs, cadaver dogs, etc. my favorite breeds are border collies, duck tollers, portuguese water dogs, lundehunds, dalmatians, and greyhounds!
🧭 i am otherkin. my most prominent types are:
doghearted
caninekin, especially dogs (and particularly shepherds)
biology conceptkin
orcahearted
🍀 i really like musicals, my favorite is hamilton! i am also a fan of EPIC and dear evan hansen. other interests include how to train your dragon, the owl house, warrior cats, and my little pony. i also LOOOOVE the amazing digital circus ✴️ i practice daemonism! my daemon is a crow/fox named vuu. 🇭🇹 i am haitian, i like researching black history
andd to conclude, my strawpage, if that at all concerns you. feel free to send me asks and stuff on there!














