Photo Credit: Scott Skaleski
Current Matriarch: B7 Scarlet
Number of Individuals: 19 (8 living- 2 female, 4 male, 2 unknown gender; 11 deceased- 1 female, 9 male, 1 unknown gender)
B2 Baronet (Male; ~1952-1998 (~46))
Presumed brother of B11. Father of I47
B11 (Female; ~1939-1973 (~34))
Presumed sister of B2
B1 Hooker (Male; ~1952-1998 (~46))
B3 (Male; ~1962-1982 (~20))
B5 (Male; ~1966-1982 (~16))
B6 Bauza (Male; ~1973-1992 (~19))
B7 Scarlet (Female; ~1954)
B8 Izumi (I-soo-me) (Male; ~1967-2002 (~35))
B10 Slingsby (Male; 1979-2021 (42))
Dorsal fin laid at an extreme angle and was extremely wavy
B12 Nakwakto (Nak-wak-toh) (Male; 1984-2006 (22))
Dorsal fin had fully collapsed to the right side by 2006. Was named after Nakwakto Rapids, which in turn were named after the Nakwaxda’xw (Nakwakto) peoples, now called the Gwaʼsala-ʼNakwaxdaʼxw Nations (a combination of two groups, the Gwaʼsa̱la and the ʼNakʼwaxdaʼx̱w who were forcefully removed from their ancestral homelands by the Canadian government in 1964)
B13 Yuculta (Oo-culth-ah) (Male; 1987)
Named after Yuculta Rapids, which in turn is named after the Liǧʷiłdaxʷ/Laich-kwil-tach (formerly Yuculta) Peoples. Since 2006, his dorsal fin has been completely collapsed to the left side
B14 Klaskish (Female; 1991)
Named after Klaskish Inlet, which is possibly named after the Kwak̓wala word meaning "seaside beach"
B16 Arrow (Male; 2004)
B17 Nasparti (Male; 2008)
B18 (Unknown; 2008- 2008 (<1))
B19 Aster (Male; 2014)
B20 Aktis (Unknown; 2020)
Named after Aktis Island, which was named after the Ka:'yu:'k't'h'/Che:k:tles7et'h' First Nations village Ak:tiis, meaning "grassy" in the Nuučaan̓uɫ (Nuu-chah-nulth) language
B21 (Unknown; 2025)
B15 Raven (Male; 1995- 2010 (15))
Photo Credit: Killer Whales: The Natural History and Genealogy of Orcinus Orca in British Columbia and Washington
B2 Baronet
Photo Credit: Killer Whales: The Natural History and Genealogy of Orcinus Orca in British Columbia and Washington
B5
Photo Credit: Killer Whales: The Natural History and Genealogy of Orcinus Orca in British Columbia and Washington
B6 Bauza
Photo Credit: Killer Whales: The Natural History and Genealogy of Orcinus Orca in British Columbia and Washington
B3
Photo Credit: Killer Whales: The Natural History and Genealogy of Orcinus Orca in British Columbia and Washington
B1 Hooker
Photo Credit:Jonathan Kelley
B7 Scarlet
Photo Credit: Killer Whales: The Natural History and Genealogy of Orcinus Orca in British Columbia and Washington
B8 Isumi
Photo Credit: Marine Ecology and Telemetry Research
B10 Slingsby
Photo Credit: Killer Whales: The Natural History and Genealogy of Orcinus Orca in British Columbia and Washington
B12 Nakwakto
Photo Credit: Court Grace
B13 Yuculta
Photo Credit: Northern Resident Killer Whales of British Columbia: Photo-identification Catalog and Population Status to 2010
B15 Raven
Photo Credit: Dale Frink
B14 Klaskish
Photo Credit: Oliver Haussemann
B16 Arrow
Photo Credit: Jim Lewis
B17 Nasparti
Photo Credit: Oliver Haussemann
B19 Aster
Photo Credit: Bay Cetology
B20 Aktis