Photo Credit: Vancouver Island Whale Watch
Photo Credit: Dena Matkin
T124 Myrtle/Fertile Myrtle
Photo Credit: Val Watson
T124A1 Bonapartes
Photo Credit: Vancouver Island Whale Watch
T124A2 Elkugu/Elkuga
Photo Credit: Vancouver Island Whale Watch
T124A2B Litton
Photo Credit: Jared Towers
T124A3A Spindrift/Alethia
Photo Credit: Katherine McDermott
T124A Kittiwake
Photo Credit: Katherine McDermott
T124A1A Sabine
Photo Credit: Vancouver Island Whale Watch
T124A2A Agafia
Photo Credit: Jared Towers
T124A3 Wasini
Photo Credit: Katherine McDermott
T124A4 Sabio
Current Matriarch: T124A Kittiwake, T124A1 Bonapartes, T124A2 Elkugu/Elkuga, T124A4 Sabio, T124D Field (Matrilines considered separate due to group splitting)
Number of Individuals: 22 (15 living- 10 female, 5 male; 4 deceased- 3 female, 1 male, 3 unknown gender)
T124 Myrtle/Fertile Myrtle (Female; ~1974-2016 (~42))
T124A Kittiwake (Female; 1984)
Matriline has dispersed from the rest of the group. Was found to be 6.6m (21.65ft) long in a 2020 photogrammetry study
T124A1 Bonapartes (Female; 1996)
Matriline has dispersed from the rest of the group. Was found to be 6.6m (21.65ft) long in a 2020 photogrammetry study. Has not traveled with T124A1A since her birth, leading to speculation that T124A1A may be T124A4's second calf
T124A1A Sabine (Female; 2024)
Her status as T124A1's daughter is still disputed. After being seen close to her for the first few encounters, when T124A1 dispersed from the matriline again, T124A1A stayed with the T124A matriline. She currently travels with T124A4 and her daughter. It's not confirmed if she's T124A4's daughter or if T124A4 adopted T124A1A for some reason. Seems to have been in increasingly good condition since she started traveling with T124A4
T124A2 Elkugu/Elkuga (Female; 2001)
Matriline has dispersed from the rest of the group, but she frequently travels with the T124A4's. Was found to be 6.4m (20.99ft) long in a 2020 photogrammetry study. Name is the Tlingit placename for Cape Edward
T124A2A Agafia (Male; 2013)
Has a chunk missing from the right side of his fluke. Was found to be 5m (16.4ft) long in a 2020 photogrammetry study
T124A2B Litton (Female; 2016)
Was found to be 4m (13.12ft) long in a 2020 photogrammetry study
T124A3 Wasini (Female; 2006-2020 (14))
Was found floating near Tenakee Springs, Alaska on December 4, 2020. Was found to be 5.9m (19.35ft) long in a 2020 photogrammetry study
T124A3A Spindrift/Alethia (Male; 2019-2021 (3))
T124A4 Sabio (Female; 2010)
Was found to be 5.3m (17.38ft) long in a 2020 photogrammetry study. Dispersed from the rest of the matriline in 2020, but frequently travels with T124A2
T124A4A Strix (Female; 2021)
T124A5 (Unknown; 2014-2015 (1))
T124A6 Kasuun/Kaswn (Male; 2016)
Name means "beautiful place" in the Athabaskan language
T124A7 Kite (Female; 2021)
T124B Zarembo (Female; 1988-~2008? (~20?))
Death year is unknown but is based off of the last known mention of her
T124B1 Sean (Unknown; 2001-~2008? (~7?))
Death year is unknown but is based off of the last known mention of them
T124C Cooper (Male; 1992)
T124D Field (Female; 1996)
Matriline has dispersed from the rest of the group
T124D1 Salish II (Female; 2014)
T124D2 Seretse (Unknown; 2017-2021 (4))
T124D3 Lupine (Female; 2022)
T124D4 Dune (Male; 2024)
T124E Murk (Male; 1999-2021 (22))
Photo Credit: Katherine McDermott
T124A4A Strix
Photo Credit: Gary Sutton
T124A5
Photo Credit: Katherine McDermott
T124A6 Kasuun/Kaswn
Photo Credit: Katherine McDermott
T124A7 Kite
Photo Credit: Transient Killer Whales of British Columbia and Southeast Alaska
T124B Zarembo
Photo Credit: Transient Killer Whales of British Columbia and Southeast Alaska
T124B1 Sean
Photo Credit: Vancouver Island Whale Watch
T124C Cooper
Photo Credit: Vancouver Island Whale Watch
T124D Field
Photo Credit: Vancouver Island Whale Watch
T124D1 Salish II
Photo Credit: Photo-identification Catalogue, Population Status, and Distribution of Bigg’s Killer Whales known from Coastal Waters of British Columbia, Canada
T124D2 Seretse
Photo Credit: Vancouver Island Whale Watch
T124D3 Lupine
Photo Credit: Vancouver Island Whale Watch
T124D4 Dune
Photo Credit: Dena Matkin
T124E Murk