SCP-4778

Item#: 4778
Level3
Containment Class:
esoteric
Secondary Class:
archon
Disruption Class:
dark
Risk Class:
notice

whale.jpg
An emerging SCP-4778 instance.

Special Containment Procedures: Oceanic Task Force Delta-7 ("Bay-Watchers") is to follow the SCP-4778 pods during their migration, to ensure safety from civilian or commercial interference. OTF Delta-7 has a two nautical mile restricted waters perimeter, sustained under the guise of military-funded scientific research.

Aquatic-Research Facility-98C is located in the SCP-4778 breeding grounds in the Northern Pacific Ocean. Facility-98C is responsible for the safety of SCP-4778 instances during the breeding season. All newly reported instances of SCP-4778 are to be safely escorted to this facility; after evaluation, new instances are to be introduced to the SCP-4778 pod.

The MTF Epsilon-31 ("Harpoon-Hunters") is currently seeking out and dismantling illegal whaling operations in areas of suspected SCP-4778 habitation.

Description: SCP-4778 are an anomalous subspecies of North-Pacific humpback whales (Megaptera novaeangliae). Instances are nearly identical to baseline humpback whales but possess bioluminescent stripes not found in any other currently known species of whale.

Unlike non-anomalous humpback whales, whose diet consists of krill and small fish, SCP-4778's diet consists of human waste byproducts and oceanic pollutants. This has caused a deviation from normal humpback migration routes. SCP-4778 pods frequently traverse the "Great Pacific Garbage Patch"1 before returning south to warmer waters for the breeding season.

The pollutants consumed by SCP-4778 instances are processed into a biological slurry consisting of nitrogen, carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and previously undiscovered compounds. This bio-waste slurry is documented as SCP-4778-1. SCP-4778-1 has shown the ability to help support new aquatic sea life, repairing damage caused by the pollutants removed from the local ecosystem. The organ or system directly responsible for this process is currently unknown.


mut.png

A model of SCP-4778-A.

In 2010, DNA analysis led to the discovery of the mutagenic DNA cluster responsible for the deviation of the SCP-4778 subspecies, the mutagen has been documented as SCP-4778-A. Extensive research into the exact nature and origin of this mutagenic cluster has been made, but no conclusive explanation has been reached. The time necessary for this evolutionary deviation does not correlate with the availability of the species' food supply.

SCP-4778-A shares key features found in man-made mutagens, though the methods for producing SCP-4778-A were not developed at the time of discovery; current technology has proved incapable of duplicating the results.

Discovery: On 12/13/1967 the following VHF radio communications were intercepted by a Foundation listening post in Hawaii. The broadcast was made by Captain Turner Lewis aboard the U.S.S. Lockfield to the US Naval Command, while on its routine observation route.

<Begin Log>

U.S.S. Lockfield: CONTACT - LIGHTS FROM AN UNKNOWN SOURCE

US Naval Command: IDENTIFY

U.S.S Lockfield: NO RESPONSE

US Naval Command: VISUAL IDENTIFICATION

U.S.S Lockfield: INVESTIGATING

US Naval Command: PROCEED WITH CAUTION

U.S.S. Lockfield: 14 BOGIES APPROACHING AHEAD TO STARBOARD

US Naval Command: REPORT

U.S.S. Lockfield: CONTACT - UNKNOWN ANIMAL

US Naval Command: IDENTIFY

U.S.S. Lockfield: GLOWING WHALES

US Naval Command: REPEAT

U.S.S. Lockfield: BOGIES ARE GLOWING WHALES

US Naval Command: COPY - NO ACTION REQUIRED

<End Log>

Upon receiving the broadcast a Foundation exploration of the area led to the discovery of SCP-4778. By 1968, further investigation estimated a total species population of approximately 35,000 in the Pacific ocean alone.

NOTICE FROM THE FOUNDATION PARAZOOLOGY DIVISION

Due to the increase in whaling operations since the time of discovery, as of 2019, the current global SCP-4778 population is estimated to be under 500 instances, with only 153 currently under Foundation observation. Due to the beneficial impact SCP-4778 has on the environment and the low disruption caused by its anomalous nature, it is the stated position of the Parazoology Division that drastic Foundation intervention is necessary and warranted to repopulate and preserve the species. SCP-4778 have the ability to help mitigate the immediate threat posed by oceanic pollution which outweighs the necessity for normalcy in this situation.

— Dr. Kyle Suttler, Director, Parazoology Division

[ETHICS COMMITTEE APPROVED]
[PENDING O5 APPROVAL]

Unless otherwise stated, the content of this page is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License