The Blue Corridors: Secrets of Ocean Migrations

Discover the Ancient Routes of the Ocean’s Greatest Travelers

Across the seas, invisible Blue Corridors link feeding grounds to breeding areas, pathways used for millions of years by whales, marlins, and other marine species. These migrations connect cold and warm waters, distant coastlines, and vital ecosystems.

Why Blue Corridors Matter

These ocean highways are essential for survival, but face growing threats from shipping, overfishing, and climate change. Protecting them safeguards not just wildlife, but the balance of life in the sea.

Humpback Whales

Each year, humpbacks journey from polar feeding grounds to warm tropical nurseries in places like French Polynesia and Tonga, guided by instinct and the turning seasons.

Sperm Whales

These deep-diving giants travel along ocean highways that stretch across vast open seas, navigating deep canyons and strong social bonds as they search for squid. In places like Dominica, they rise from the depths, offering rare glimpses into their hidden world.

Striped Marlins

These powerful fish ride ocean currents in search of sardine schools, traveling the Pacific along dynamic Blue Corridors. Nowhere is their movement more dramatic than in Baja’s Magdalena Bay, where baitballs become battlegrounds in a perfectly choreographed hunt.

Join Us in the Blue

Experience the wonder of ocean migrations firsthand. Swim alongside humpback whales in French Polynesia and Tonga, witness the deep-diving world of sperm whales in Dominica, or watch striped marlins at full speed in Baja, Mexico. Every encounter is a step deeper into the heart of the ocean.