Skip to content

Gliders monitoring for right whales in Gulf of St. Lawrence

A North Atlantic right whale detection program in the Gulf of St. Lawrence is expanding.

Officials announced that a third underwater robot called a glider will be added this summer.

The Robots4Whales program monitors right whales in near real-time in the gulf’s shipping lanes.

It is a high-traffic route for vessels entering Canadian ports and a major area for commercial fisheries.

Officials said the gliders help protect the endangered whales while reducing the number of precautionary slowdowns for vessels.

At least 15 right whales have died form vessel strikes in Canadian and U.S. waters since January 2017, and at least 40 mortalities have occurred from all causes in that time.

The program is a partnership between the University of New Brunswick, the Ocean Tracking Network, Transport Canda, and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution.


  • Brad Perry is an award-winning news anchor and reporter and a 2013 graduate of the NBCC journalism program. Based in New Brunswick, he is also the assistant national news director for Acadia Broadcasting. Contact Brad at perry.brad@radioabl.ca.

    View all posts

Do you have a news tip?

Submit to NBNews@radioabl.ca.

loader-image
Saint John, CA
5:29 pm, Apr 11, 2026
weather icon 9°C
L: 9° H: 9°

What’s Trending