WHALE FALL: THE SOURCE BIOLOGY
When a whale dies, its body goes through a series of use stages that are collectively known as “whale fall,” which is also the name of the whale mass (“a whale fall”) as it reaches the ocean floor. The stages are known as succession, a phrase used more generally to describe the way systems or populations succeed (in the sense of follow, come after) each other. Succession is about temporary equilibriums giving way to new temporary equilibriums, about the way exhaustions or depletions open the field for a different set of organisms to thrive.
The first phase of whale fall, taking place between the ocean’s surface and the the ocean floor, is the mobile scavenger phase, when sharks, hagfish, octopus, crabs, and other mobile scavengers feed on the whale’s flesh, causing it to sink. This phase begins within minutes of the whale’s death and continues for months to a few years, as mobile scavengers on the ocean floor continue to feed on the carcass.
This phase gives way to the enrichment opportunist phase, in which nothing goes to waste, as the bits of whale flesh that remain on the skeleton or have fallen to the ocean bed create a new own ecosystem supporting a new set of animals: worms, by the tens of thousands every square meter: visualize a lawn of waving white grass surrounding a skeleton with each bone dressed in a polar bear suit. (There are species of worms that only live on whale fall, as far as is known.) In this stage the bones of the whale are partially decomposed, stripped of lipids by a special bone-eating worm. This lasts for two years until only the stripped bones remain.
The opportunist phase is followed by the sulfophilic phase, or sulphur-loving stage, lasting from 10-50 years, in which the stripped bones of the whale are colonized by benthic fauna species of a diversity greater than any other deep-sea community. Bacteria break down the bone, releasing sulphur, which in turn enables other organisms to live — up to 30,000 organisms on a single whale skeleton. In the nutrient-poor benthic environment (benthic: of the ocean floor, pelagic: of the sea far from shore), a whale fall is life-giving, an oasis.
Obviously, whale fall, with its successions, is a perfect story form.
MATTER: SUCCESSION, NUTRITION, TIME
Whale Fall is the term for everything that happens between a whale dying toward the surface of the sea and the body of the whale sinking to the ocean floor where it is put to long successions of re-use. Whale Fall starts with a death but is above all a long duration of nutrition toward life. The afterlife of the whale is not its own ghost but all the life it enables after its death, in successive stages that encompass greater and greater multitudes of living things. What appeals to my story mind most about Whale Fall is its time aperture. Whale Fall can last 50–75 years, the body of the whale sustaining life for roughly as long as it might have lived, a shadow symmetry. Whale Fall as a story form opens up the question of when the game is over and who its players are.
METHOD (1): ANALOGY, RULE, SCORE
This workshop’s method is analogic play: gleaning patterns, proportions, forms, and cycles from one thing (whale fall) and transplanting them, both as generative prompt and formal score, to another (a story told). I love to work from analogy like this because it creates new rules. A rule gives you something to follow or yield to, puts a useful edge around an invention, composition or improvisation. A new rule allows you free play while still giving you support and containment; you are unburdened by the accumulation of example or orthodoxy around how to embrace the rule.
Other words could be swapped in for rule: shape is one I like, less fringed by connotations of authority and always porous, relational, open to play (an X in the shape of a Y). Score is another, a trade word in improvisational dancing, part of the groundwork of my own thinking, naming an organizational scheme while leaving open the question of how to manifest or solve it. One sense of rule I’d like to preserve is the one that brings us the (wooden) ruler, the one that thinks in intervals, distances, and the relation of units to each other. The other is the sense of rules in a game: temporarily agreed-upon limitations of play that govern what kinds of moves are possible in order to lay open a space for experiment and risk and let us know we’ve made it to the end. Writing is usually a game of solitaire (excepting writer’s rooms) (solitaire as the weft within a warp of other texts, voices, and the whole ocean of shared and inherited language we write in). So we can put aside the rules around winning. Winning is getting to the end? Winning is to enjoy the time spent playing? Winning is the transfer of what you’ve written to receptive eyes or ears?
Anyway, the rules in Whale Fall are yours to make, borrow, transgress or let slip as you see fit.
There is one rule that’s always on my mind when I think about narrative, a kind of steady-state straw man of mine, the transgression of which I personally delight in, which goes shorthanded as “the unities” — Aristotle’s description of a good tragedy as compassing a single “action” in distinction to the epic form, which is one of multiplicity and latitude. (Maybe more accurate to say the straw man is the theater world orthodoxy (now, I hope, fading into the past) around what units measure that unity and what types of events give it coherence.) Whale Fall as a biological phenomenon is both a single action and an epic. How you see it depends on the units your ruler is measuring. What constitutes a wholeness? In how many acts do we frame or regard it? Open question.
METHOD (2): CONJURE-COLLECT, ASSEMBLE, CAREGIVE
Whale Fall, the pop-up workshop happens in successive stages too—a different succession than Whale Fall, the marine-biological phenomenon. This succession somewhat replays the three-draft musical-architectonic-textile sequence I put out here in some 2019 pop-ups, gleaned from a Walter Benjamin note, but with adjacent names that offer slightly different directions for our attention and so might lead to a different experience of the writing process.
The conjuring/collecting and assembling phases will be offered together for each of the three stages of the whale fall. This means that next Sunday I’ll send both conjure/collect and assemble prompts for mobile scavenger, the week after that for enrichment opportunist, and then for sulphur loving. In the conjure/collecting prompts, I will offer translations and analogies for imaginatively summoning or going out in search of material (images and event traces with particular respect to nutrition and use). The conjure/collect draft is not really a draft, it’s a heap of stuff that can be made into a draft, perhaps with many mini-drafts or partial drafts already germinating inside it. In the assembling prompts I will offer translations and analogies for assembling collected material into a portion of a story. Because one of the pleasures of whale fall as a source analogy is its very different communities that belong to each of its phases, we will collect and assemble (i.e. prepare and draft) each phase of the story before moving on to the next.
The last phase of the pop-up is the caregiving phase, in which we will put the three assemblages together and then consider them from the standpoint of care: cleaning, supporting, feeding, trimming, dressing, braiding, setting up to rest a comfortable place with fresh air and good views, ushering to its good ending.
In practical terms, after this overview and a note on approach, there are five installments of the Whale Fall workshop, followed by a one-installment coda will follow, Shadow Twin, which can be used as a stand-alone microfiction prompt, or linked to Whale Fall as epigraph or epilogue or companion piece.
MORE READING/VIEWING
If you want more of the science, here are some resources. If you’re not into looking at whale carcasses being actively scavenged, skip videos (tho I wouldn’t say they’re gross at all).
Here’s a NOAA fact sheet with a short edited video of a deep-sea camera finding a whale fall.
Here’s unedited footage of that same event, with lots of marine biologists omging in pure delight.
Here’s a nice succession-oriented page with good pictures of the creatures.
And here’s where I first encountered whale fall in the poetic-ecstatic mood, a Radiolab episode called Loops. (Whale Fall segment is from 30:00–37:45)